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Politics : Stop the War! -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: zonder who wrote (6467)4/2/2003 8:22:16 AM
From: Thomas M.  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 21614
 
S African Human Shields Back From Iraq With Message

A group of 20 battle-weary South African human shields
returned from Baghdad on Tuesday, declaring that the Iraqi
people do not want to be "liberated".

Abie Dawjee, the leader of the group called the Iraqi Action
Committee, said every Iraqi he had spoken to was passionate
about fighting the invaders.

"We spoke freely to Iraqis from all walks of life, in the streets, in
hospitals, in country areas and in houses, and without exception
the message was the same: the invaders must get out, we do not
want you to liberate us," Mr Dawjee told reporters at
Johannesburg International Airport.

Asked about the perception of Iraqi civilans toward President
Saddam Hussein, Mr Dawjee said the strong resistance against
the coalition forces reflected the anger of the Iraqi people over
what had been done to them since the first Gulf war in 1991.

"The indiscriminate bombing in the first Gulf war that destroyed
so many civilian targets, the US-led sanctions that have lead to
the deaths of 1.3 million Iraqis and the dropping of
depleted-uranium bombs in the final days of the last war which
gave so many Iraqis cancer, have caused tremendous anger."

Thirty-two South African shields arrived in Iraq shortly before
the first bombing of Baghdad on March 19.

Eight arrived home last week, while four others are assisting at a
refugee border camp in Jordan.

A number of the shields cried and embraced as Mr Dawjee
recounted the events of the past 12 days.

"When we got there we plugged into the other human shield
groups that were already operating," Mr Dawjee said.

"We shielded a water purification plant, an oil refinery and a
water treatment plant," he said.

He said Iraqi civilians often visited the human shields and
brought them gifts and food.

"We even went into some of their houses - they were very
appreciative of us being there, especially of our South African
contingent which was by far the largest from any country," He
said.

"We were staying in prefab houses at the sites and when the
bombs dropped the houses would shake and rattle, it was
unbelievably frightening. I can only imagine how the Iraqi
families were feeling."

The group had visited a residential area where five homes had
been flattened by bombs.

They had also been to a hospital where they saw the broken
bodies of little children.

One of the woman shields, Ridwana Jooma, said the worst part
of being in Iraq was leaving.

"Every breath you take might be your last, because you never
know when a missile might go astray," she said.

"By being there I learned the gift of life. I did not want to come
home."

abc.net.au



To: zonder who wrote (6467)4/2/2003 8:36:13 AM
From: Vitas  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 21614
 
another pedestrian post from zonder -lol-

now you can spend the rest of the day pasting messages posted on this thread into a word processor to see if they pass spellchecker