By
Aws Al-Sharqy, IOL Baghdad Correspondent
BAGHDAD,
June 2 (IslamOnline.net) - With a poor security situation, no central
government at the helm and U.S. military inaction, drug addiction and
trading has found a fertile breeding ground in the Iraqi capital.
Drug
addiction had earlier been limited, with death sentence as a
punishment and strict government control to keep the wide-known slogan
“No talking about politics, no drug taking,” up and running.
But
with the U.S. forces trundling into Baghdad and Saddam Hussein’s
ouster, mixed feelings of relief and regret are running high among
people here, who have felt that they have got rid of a long-running
dictatorial oppressor but have lost security and other key benefits in
return.
“Every
night, some armed young men push into the area to sell drugs, with the
help of friends of the inhabitants,” Khaled Nuri, a grocer, told
IslamOnline.net Monday, June 2.
“Drugs
easily found its way into the hands of Iraqis but not the democracy
and freedom touted by the occupiers,” said Nuri, echoing many of
Iraqis’ anti-American sentiments coupled with the frustration that
the U.S. and British forces backed down from earlier promises of a
better future.
A
U.S. official told reporters earlier in the day that the U.S.
administrators have
decided to "select" a small group of Iraqis to serve
on an interim advisory council rather than convene a national
conference sought by many Iraqis to create a transitional national
representative authority for their country.
Nuri
said that the spread of drug addiction and trade was also boosted by
growing unemployment rates and a large number of cafes in the capital.
‘Suspicious’
Silence
What
infuriates Iraqis is the lack of measures by the U.S.-installed police
to crack down on emerging drug barons.
“Strangely,
neither local police, nor occupation forces raided these areas and
protect our youths from these poisons whose sources are unknown,”
said Nuri
In
Al-Muridi market, the trade found a ground, leaving inhabitants as
concerned as disgruntled that their children might fall prey to the
phenomenon in light of great psychological frustrations after the
invasion.
“We
hate those traders, but we can not face them. They are gangsters. They
could act in revenge,” lamented one inhabitant, who refused to give
his name.
“In
Saddam’s era, no one ever thought of getting drugs; but now the
atmosphere is dominated by criminals and drug dealers who are
accompanied by those who protect them,” he added.
The
phenomenon carries a moral change in a presumably religious society,
whose members began fingering the occupying forces for complacency.
“The
invaders encourage drug dealing, or where were all these drugs before
the U.S, forces pushed into our areas?,” wondered Islamic preacher
Mohamed Abdel-Aziz Al-Kufi.
Qufi
called on Iraqis to be as vigilant and face these affairs that
“corrupt our generations,” said Kufi.
Civil
Attempts
Facing
this phenomenon, the Muslim Youth Society championed a campaign to
raise the awareness of Iraqis to the threats of drugs and “erase all
traces of occupation that destroyed the cohesiveness of the Iraqi
society,” said the society’s chairman Anis Al-Rawi.
Shiite
scholars also warned against the spread of drugs, alcoholics, and
prostitution after the U.S.-British strikes. Others called for setting
up committees to stand up to the new threats in the absence of an
Iraqi government.