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Iraqis Lament U.S. Version Of "Freedom"

A man offers new Iraqi passports as well as Kalashnikov rifles for sale at a street market in Baghdad

By Aws Al-Sharqy, IOL Iraq Correspondent

BAGHDAD, April 30 (IslamOnline.net) - "America got us freedom, but with destructive missiles, looting and lawlessness," complained Rasheed Mosuli of the U.S. forces aggression against his country in the name of "freedom".

"They crossed oceans, recruited their media, shelled our houses, destroyed our gardens, allowed thieves to steal us and spread chaos and anarchy in the country; all for the alleged ultimate aim of freedom," charged Mosuli, as did many here after the end of the U.S.-led war and the overthrow of Saddam Hussein's dictatorship.

The Iraqis said the U.S. forces did not act enough to stop the wave of looting and thievery the country descended into after they drove into Baghdad on April 9 declaring the Iraqi regime now crumbled.

"After the situation was stable, the U.S. forces allowed the parties to claim control of the government buildings without even limiting the number allotted for each one of them. Is this freedom!," wondered Mosuli with a mixed tone of sarcasm and eagerness.

Children Selling Alcohol, Guns, Porn CDs

Alcoholic beverage sellers, who sell their products in the streets to everyone, including under age youth, could now yell "yes to freedom… Beer is now by 200 dinars a bottle" to attract buyers to the new product in the country's markets.

The U.S. officials have long repeated Washington would promote democracy in Iraq and will not impose any government or culture on it.

"Iraq can be an example of peace and prosperity and freedom to the entire Middle East," Bush said on Tuesday, April 29.

But the Iraqis feel it is rather an occupation rather than a transatlantic journey for freedom. Three anti-occupation demonstrators were killed and several others wounded when U.S. soldiers opened random fire on them, only hours after 15 others killed by the U.S. gunfire in separate protests.

In the capital street markets, Kalashnikov rifles, weapons and bombs as well as other ammunitions were available to be at the hands of all civilians with lucrative prices less than a kilo of meat.

Along with a general state of lawlessness, everything could be bought including military service documents and original stamps approving them. Stolen goods are starting to surface from the extensive looting in the city after Saddam's ouster.

The U.S. forces, Iraqis said, turned a blind eye over the looting of government buildings and rushed to protect the Oil Ministry headquarters, raising public fears that it is rather a thirst for oil.

In one of the slums of Baghdad, intensively rocked by the U.S.-British warplanes for more than two weeks, car plates are offered for sale, only by 25,000 dinars each, with stamped documents to prove its authenticity.

The only blank space to write into is the name of the buyer - or let's put it clear- the thief.

The Iraqis are also morally outraged after the U.S. forces pushed into their country.

"Children could now find pornographic mags, films for sale at street market in the Iraqi capital," said Amer Sabri, wondering how such previously-tabooed things arrived in the Arab Islamic country with such amazing speed.

"Gambling was rampant in the country and people no longer harbor the earlier fear of approaching it, and we no longer hear the voices of Muezzins or Qur'an recital blaring out, " Sabri lamented.

The Iraqis were rather seething with anger at the U.S. forces' declaration they did not find weapons of mass destruction in Iraq so far, the main reason that triggered the war against the country. British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw also said Iraq may have no weapons of mass destruction.

There were also waves of massive demonstrations that broke out in various districts of the country with higher calls for ending the occupation and the precipitous formation of a national government. In one demonstration, tens of thousands of Iraqis, both Sunnis and Shiites, joined hands demanding an end to the Anglo-American occupation of their country with chants "No to Saddam, No to Bush, Yes to Islam".

But Bush kept saying that much work remains to be done in the country.

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