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Islam forbids body mutilation even of enemy soldiers
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BAGHDAD,
April 1 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – The gruesome images
of mutilated bodies of American contractors in the flashpoint town of
Fallujah a day earlier, drew broad condemnation Thursday, April 1, and
pledges to bring the culprits to justice.
Addressing
479 new graduates from the Iraqi police academy in the capital
Baghdad, U.S. administrator Paul Bremer vowed that this
"inexcusable and despicable" crime "will not go
unpunished."
He
asserted that the four contractors "not died in vain" and
that this "will not derail the march toward stability and
democracy in Iraq."
Gunmen
had ambushed two four-wheel-drive vehicles in Fallujah Wednesday,
March 31, killing four American contractors working for the North
Carolina-based Blackwater Security Consulting, before angry crowds
mutilated the charred remains of two of the victims.
The
White House condemned the "horrific" attack but vowed to
stay the course in Iraq."
"These
are horrific attacks by people who are trying to prevent democracy
from moving forward," said White House spokesman Scott McClellan.
"We
condemn these attacks on the strongest possible terms.
"There
are some who want to intimidate the Iraqi people, who want to
intimidate the coalition, they want to intimidate the international
community and they cannot," he said.
The
Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) also denounced the
mutilations, saying they "violated both Islamic and international
norms of conduct," calling on all parties to the conflict
"to respect the sanctity of the dead."
War
is decreed in Islam in self defense and its aim is to ward off
aggression.
Fighting
should be directed only against fighting troops, and not
to non-fighting personnel, and this is in compliance with the
Qur’anic verse that reads: "Fight in the way of Allah against
those who fight against you, but begin not hostilities. Lo! Allah
loveth not, aggressors." (Al-Baqarah: 190)
And
even in cases of aggression, Islam forbids
the mutilation of enemy soldiers' bodies, even if they do such a
despicable crime to the bodies of Muslim soldiers.
Shocking
Images
The
pictures of the charred, mutilated bodies filled the U.S. airwaves,
recalling the grisly scene surrounding the deaths of U.S. servicemen
in Somalia a decade ago.
The
three main American broadcast networks all began their Wednesday
evening newscasts with video of the grisly aftermath of the Fallujah
attack, warning viewers about the graphic images.
ABC
and CBS television showed pictures of the bodies being pulled out of a
burning vehicle, hacked by angry Iraqis, dragged behind a car and
strung up on a bridge, but electronically blurred the images of the
corpses.
Both
networks noted the similarities with the abuse meted out to the
corpses of American soldiers killed in Somalia in October 1993 in an
ill-fated raid depicted in the book and movie "Black Hawk Down."
The
attack in Mogadishu came during what should have been a relatively
straightforward U.S. search and capture mission that went badly wrong.
But
by the end of the exercise, 18 Americans were killed, hundreds of
Somalis lost their lives and thousands were injured.
Pictures
of a dead American serviceman being dragged through the street aired
constantly on U.S. television, and led to the eventual evacuation of
U.S. forces from Somalia.
The
other major network, NBC, edited the Fallujah pictures so that the
corpses were less visible, but also devoted the first segment of its
broadcast to the ambush.
CNN
initially declined to show any images of the bodies of the victims but
repeatedly ran footage of their burning vehicle and jubilant Iraqis.
In
a report later in the day it showed pictures of the charred bodies
hanging from a bride as a CNN correspondent said: "Some images
are necessary to fully show the extent of the violence."
CNN
anchor Paula Zahn asked viewers "Does today change the way you
look at the war?"
The
top U.S. dailies screamed with headlines about the mutilations and the
Iraqi mob who did it, with the most gruesome photos published by The
Washington Post -- people beating a body near a burning car,
and The New York Times -- two bodies hanging from a
bridge.
With
a more discrete photo of a burning car, The Wall Street Journal
published the only editorial on the mob killing, saying it was a
"wake-up call to the occupation forces that democracy will have a
hard time taking root in Iraq so long as justice takes a
holiday," and calling for the "swift arrest and visible
punishment" of the culprits.