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This invasion, and there's nothing else to call it, is an outrage against this nation and has meant the entire destruction of a country, Sahara said
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BAGHDAD,
April 18 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) - After a month sitting
at a Baghdad power plant, Sergio Sahara has packed his bags.
The
Argentine human shield did not prevent the United States from invading
Iraq, but he has no regrets, and is even angrier than the day he
arrived, Agence France-Presse (AFP) said.
"I'm
heading back to Cordoba to bear witness to the crimes of the United
States in Iraq," said the 36-year-old office administrator.
"This
invasion, and there's nothing else to call it, is an outrage against
this nation and has meant the entire destruction of a country. This is
what I'm going to recount in Cordoba," he said.
Before
the start of the war, the Argentine went to neighboring Jordan in
hopes of being a volunteer in Iraq.
"But
they explained to me that the only way to enter the country was to be
a human shield. Within minutes I decided that was a price worth
paying," he said.
Hundreds
of people volunteered as human shields in Iraq in hopes of stopping
the United States from attacking the country, or at least particular
targets of importance to the civilian population.
Sahara
spent a month at a power plant with eight other shields from various
countries, including France, Japan and Poland. The site was not
bombed, but Baghdad's electricity went down nonetheless on April 4
amid heavy US bombing elsewhere in the capital.
Five
days later, US forces rolled into the center of Baghdad.
Sahara
said his vigil was not futile.
"I
leave here happy for this reason: Perhaps if we weren't there, then
the site could have been attacked. But what is important is that we
defended something that is vital for the Iraqi people," he said.
A
Crime
When
he finally left the power plant last weekend, he was shocked to see
Baghdad engulfed by chaos
and looting in the post-Saddam power vacuum. He was filled with
feelings of sadness and impotence.
"This
is a crime against this people, who are magnificent," he said.
As
he leaves Iraq the authorities he is dealing with are not from Saddam
Hussein's regime but US troops who have set up checkpoints and
roadblocks across the country.
He
did not have any major complaints about his interaction with the
soldiers.
"It's
not their fault. They only follow orders from a murderer," he
said, in reference to US President George W. Bush.
But
the memory that remains most etched in this human shield's mind is not
from the endless nights at the power plant.
Sahara,
who spent four years studying theology in Africa, said he met up this
week in Baghdad with a Baptist pastor.
"He
took us to visit houses in the south of the city where two families
were buried alive when a bomb fell. These were all innocent
civilians," he said.
Sahara
is not optimistic. In his view, Iraq suffered under Saddam and will
suffer under the Americans.
"When
I was a student I used to read about the history of invasions and
colonization. What's happened in Iraq right now is exactly the same.
It makes me so sad. This wasn't a war against a dictator but a
complete occupation of a country."