I
am sending this letter to the British people and, in particular,
to the residents of London.
For
a period of hours, you lived through moments of anxiety and
horror. In those hours you lost a member of your family or
a friend, and we wish to tell you, in total honesty, that we,
too, grieve when human lives are lost. I cannot tell you
how much we feel hurt when we see desperation and pain on the
face of another person, for we have lived through this
situation—and we continue to live through it everyday—since
your country and the United States formed a coalition and laid
plans to attack Iraq.
The
prime minister of your country, Tony Blair, said that those who
carried out the explosions did so in the name of Islam. The
secretary of state of the United States, Condoleezza Rice,
described the bombings as an act of barbarism. The United
Nations Security Council met and unanimously condemned the
event. I would like to ask you, the free British people, in
whose name was our country blockaded for 12 years? In whose
name were our cities bombed using internationally prohibited
weapons? In whose name did the British army kill Iraqis and
torture them? Was that in your name? Or in the name of
religion? Or humanity? Or freedom? Or democracy?
What
do you call the killing of more than two million children? What
do you call the pollution of soil and water with depleted
uranium and other lethal substances? What do you call what
happened in prisons in Iraq—Abu Ghraib, Camp Bucca, and many
other prison camps? What do you call the torture of men,
women, and children? What do you call tying bombs to
prisoners’ bodies and blowing them apart? What do you
call the refinement of methods of torture for use in Iraqi
prisoners—methods such as pulling off limbs, gouging out eyes,
putting out cigarettes on prisoners’ skin, and using cigarette
lighters to set fire to the hair on prisoners’ heads? Does
the word “barbaric” adequately describe the behavior of your
troops in Iraq?
May
we ask why the Security Council did not condemn the massacre in
Al-Amiriyah and what happened in Al-Fallujah, Tal a`far, Sadr
City, and An-Najaf? Why does the world watch as our people
are being killed and tortured and not condemn the crimes being
committed against us? Are you human beings and we something
less? Do you think that only you can feel pain and we
can’t? In fact it is we who are most aware of how intense
the pain is of the mother who has lost her child, or the father
who has lost his family. We know very well how painful it is to
lose those you love.
You
don’t know our martyrs, but we know them. You don’t
remember them or cry over them, but we do.
Have
you heard the name of the little girl Hannan Salih Matrud? Or
of the boy Ahmad Jabir Karim? Or Sa`id Shabram?
Yes,
our dead have names too. They have faces and stories and
memories. There was a time when they were among us, laughing and
playing. They had dreams, just as you have. They had a
tomorrow awaiting them. But today they sleep among us with no
tomorrow on which to wake.
We
don’t hate the British people or other peoples of the world. This
war was imposed on us, but we are now fighting it in defense of
ourselves, because we want to live in our homeland—the free
land of Iraq—and to live as we want to live, not as
your government and the American government wish.
Let
the families of those killed know that the responsibility for
the Thursday morning London bombings lies with Tony Blair and
his policies. Stop your war against our people! Stop the
daily killings that your troops commit! End your occupation of
our homeland!.