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[A-List] Liberation



This war is not against the Saddam government any more.  It is now a war
against the Iraqi people.

Now the true meaning of "civil society" is for the whole world to see,
looting and arson while US marines prosecute the war.

God help the liberator US marines, assuming there is a god.

Henry C.K. Liu

Eyewitness: "The marines shot anything they considered a threat"
By Paul Eedle in Baghdad Published: April 10 2003 23:26 | Last Updated:
April 10 2003 23:26 Financial Times

Continuing attacks on US forces in Baghdad by Iraqi fighters in civilian
clothes produced a deadly response on Thursday, as nervous soldiers of
the US 5th Marines opened fire repeatedly, hitting unarmed men, women
and children.

Three times in three hours I saw troops who had seized one of Saddam
Hussein's small palaces open fire, killing five people and wounding five
- among them a six-year-old girl who was shot in the head.

Lance-Corporal Manuel Silva told me at the palace in Adhamiya, north of
the centre, that the marines had heard Mr Hussein might be hiding in the
area, and had come under sustained fire from rocket-propelled grenades
and small-arms.

An officer told us later that the marines had taken many casualties.
"Their soldiers aren't wearing uniforms," Cpl Silva said. "You try to
pick out where it is coming from and all you see is civilians."

Half a mile away, we had seen a man in civilian clothes carrying a
rocket-propelled grenade launcher. Around the corner, a dead fighter lay
on the pavement by a palm tree, his face covered with a white cloth. He
was wearing grey trousers and a dirty pink jumper.

The marines shot anything that they considered remotely a threat. An old
blue Volkswagen came up an alley opposite the palace gate. A marine on
top of the stone-clad arch of the gate opened fire and the car crashed
into a wall.

We heard screaming from the alley. None of the US troops moved. If it
had not been for Mohammed Fatnan, an Iraqi translator with the UK's
Channel 4 News, the Americans would not have treated the casualties. Mr
Fatnan crossed the road outside the palace under the guns of two marine
armoured fighting vehicles and came back carrying a young girl, Zahra
Abdel-Samii', bleeding from the head.

In the alley, a man who had run on to his balcony upon hearing gunfire
had been shot dead. Men wailing "There is no God but God" were hauling
him into the back seat of a car in a blanket.

Minutes later, the explosion of a rocket-propelled grenade thundered
through the palace garden, then came bursts of heavy gunfire.

A white Mitsubishi van roared along the main road that runs beside the
palace wall, the driver slumped over the wheel, unconscious or already
dead. The van veered off the road into a wall.

Mr Fatnan and two marines ran across the road to help a woman injured in
the arm and foot and a young man, her son, shot in the head.

The dead driver had not understood the warning shots meant to tell him
to stop.

The marines had had enough of journalists filming. We walked slowly
along the road outside the palace back to our van. Our driver met us
with an account of how marines in a palace watchtower had shot dead
three men walking up the pavement only 20 yards away from him.





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