The people I spoke with at Umm Qasr said they were happy about the removal of Saddam, as he had held them in terror for years. They took me to see the local Baath Party headquarters. They told me that many bad things happened there and that most of those picked up in the middle of the night and taken to that building were never seen again.
I entered the building and walked around. I couldn’t help noticing the excitement in the people’s voices as they pointed out the bullet holes and the charred remains of where the building burned.
That was when I first got the sense that these people were really eager to see Saddam and Baath gone.
I asked several what they thought of the US/UK plan to remove Saddam. They told me: “Now that they have started to remove him, they cannot stop. If they do, then we are all as good as dead. He still has informants in Umm Qasr and he knows who is against him and who isn’t.”
When asked about what they think of this war, most Iraqis said that they were against the loss of innocent life and the destruction of their cities, but they seemed adamant about the removal of Saddam. They were happy about the “liberation” of Umm Qasr but were disappointed in the US/UK for not keeping their promises to provide humanitarian aid.
Salim, 31, told Arab News: “We have not had enough to eat or drink for three days. At the American and British camps there is electricity, just half a kilometer away. Why don’t we have any? The meat we had stored in our homes is now spoiled because there is no refrigeration.”
After visiting the Baath headquarters, the group of journalists I was with said that it would be dangerous to spend two nights in Umm Qasr, as they were concerned about a possible plan in the works to raid us for our supplies.
One of the journalists said he could possibly get us into the British Armored Transportation Division’s camp to spend the night there. We packed up our belongings, confident that we would be safer in a British camp than in Umm Qasr.
Prior to making our move to the British camp, we decided to drive to Basra to see for ourselves the on-going fight and to talk to some of the refugees and soldiers.
On the road, as we made our way to Basra, we could see that the battle had begun on the outskirts of the city and was slowly moving its way in.
Alongside the road lay the charred remains of several Iraqi tanks and anti-aircraft gun transporters, among them the charred remains of two UK or US tanks, indicating that the Iraqis had put up a fight.
As we approached Basra, we could clearly see the smoke rising in the distance. The closer we got to Basra, the more people we saw standing and walking alongside the heavily traveled road. They were begging for food and water.
Two kilometers before Basra was a bridge where a check point had been set up by British military personnel, in front of which were crouched 75 Iraqis wanting to be let into Basra.
“We have been sitting here for two days,” a number of them said. “We brought food and vegetables from the farms on the outskirts of Basra to bring for our families to eat, because the price of food in Basra has been inflated. A kilogram of tomatoes is being sold for 1,750 Iraqi dinars! Now we are not being allowed back in, our families are hungry and our tomatoes are spoiling in the sun. Our women and children are in Basra alone, and they need us with them.”
Many others wanted to go into Basra, simply to get their families so they could all leave again together, but they were prevented from doing so as well.
I approached a soldier and showed him our credentials and explained that we wanted to get into Basra to see the conditions for ourselves.
“Not today mate, it’s too dangerous,” he told us.
It was pointless to sit and argue, so we decided we should get to the British encampment, set up camp there and try again the following day. (Part III tomorrow)
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