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[Marxism] "Watching tragedy engulf my city'



Another one of modern history's real horror shows, but all indications
are that the people who remain are putting up a very major fight.
Washington Post.com headlined that those resisting were "Zarqawi
supporters" but dropped this particularly gross war propaganda later.
Fred Feldman


'Watching tragedy engulf my city'

US and Iraqi forces are locked in desperate street battles against
insurgents in the Iraqi city of Falluja. The BBC News website spoke by
phone to Fadhil Badrani, a journalist in Falluja who reports for the BBC
World Service in Arabic.

Translation from Arabic by Jumbe Omari Jumbe of bbcarabic.com

11/09/04 "BBC" -- I am surrounded by thick black smoke and the smell of
burning oil. There was a big explosion a few minutes ago and now I can
hear gunfire.

A US armoured vehicle has been parked on the street outside my house in
the centre of the city.

>From my window, I can see US soldiers moving around on foot near it.

They tried to go from house to house but they kept coming under fire.

Now they are firing back at the houses, at anything that moves. It is
war on the streets.

The American troops look like they have given up trying to go into
buildings for now and are just trying to control the main roads.

I am sitting here on my own, watching tragedy engulf my city.

Looks like Kabul

I was with some of the Falluja fighters earlier. They looked tired - but
their spirits were high and they were singing.


Recently, many Iraqis from other parts of the country have been joining
the local men against the Americans.
No one has had much sleep in the past two days of heavy fighting and of
course, it is still Ramadan, so no one eats during the day.

I cannot say how many people have been killed but after two days of
bombing, this city looks like Kabul.

Large portions of it have been destroyed but it is so dangerous to leave
the house that I have not been able to find out more about casualties.

Mosques silent

A medical dispensary in the city centre was bombed earlier.

I don't know what has happened to the doctors and patients who were
there.

It was last place you could get medical attention because the big
hospital on the outskirts of Falluja was captured by the Americans on
Monday.


A lot of the mosques have also been bombed.
For the first time in Falluja, a city of 150 mosques, I did not hear a
single call to prayer this morning.

I broke my Ramadan fast yesterday with the last of our food - two
potatoes and two tomatoes.

The tomatoes were rotten because we have no electricity to run the
fridge.

My neighbours - a woman and her children - came to see me yesterday.
They asked me to tell the world what is happening here.

I look at the devastation around me and ask - why?

Translation from Arabic by Jumbe Omari Jumbe of bbcarabic.com

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/middle_east/3996111.stm

Published: 2004/11/09 14:12:13 GMT

C BBC MMIV

(


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