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If Americans are afraid of demonstrators, what would they do with spiraling resistance? Asked one Iraqi analyst
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By
Aws Al-Sharqy, IOL Correspondent
BAGHDAD,
January 1 (IslamOnline.net) - U.S. occupation authorities in Iraq have
imposed strict restrictions on the right of the Iraqi people to
demonstrate, particularly in the capital Baghdad, in what Iraqi
political analysts described as the real face of sugar-coated
democracy clichés.
A
statement issued by the U.S.-led authority and broadcast by the Iraqi
media network Wednesday, December 31, said no individual or group is
allowed to organize marches or demonstrations or even gather in
streets, public places or buildings at any time without a prior from
the occupation command.
It
demanded those who want to demonstrate or organize a meeting to submit
a written request to the occupation authorities no less than a day
before.
The
request, according to the statement, must include the purpose and
duration of the demonstration, an estimate of the maximum number of
demonstrators and names and addresses of the organizers.
Detention
Threat
If
a permit is granted, the American statement said, demonstrators would
not be allowed to wear the traditional galabiya (a loose shirt-like
garment), helmets, hoods or even cover their faces.
Would-be
Iraqi demonstrators must also not carry guns, even the licensed,
stones or sticks, added the statement.
Last
but not least, any demonstration must not last more than four hours
and should not be organized less than 500 meters away from the
headquarters of the occupation forces and the affiliated institutions.
According
to the statement issued by the U.S.-led occupation forces any
"breach" of these restrictions will result in the
detention and trial of the "violator".
Ridicule
Iraqi
political analysts lashed out at the watertight restrictions,
stressing they unmask the ugly face of the occupation, justified by
sugar-coated clichés of bringing democracy to the oil-rich Arab
country.
"It
is unbelievable that a country boasting a democracy record would clamp
such rigid restrictions on the simplest forms of freedom of
expression, which is the right to demonstrate," said Dr.
Abdel-Sattar Gawwad, a political expert, told IslamOnline.net.
"If
the Americans are afraid of popular demonstrations, what would they do
with spiraling resistance against their presence?
"Isn't
it strange enough that the U.S. troops impose restrictions on
demonstrators? Why assuming protestors will attack armed-to-the-teeth
soldiers with stones?" Gawwad wondered.
"Does
this tell you something about claims by the U.S. forces they were
hardheartedly welcomed by Iraqis?" added the political analysts.
He
also underlined "the repressive practices of the occupation
troops in Iraq such as the raiding of houses, killing of innocents and
random detention of Iraqi citizens."
Such
practices, Gawwad added, fanned armed resistance against the U.S.-led
occupation of the country.
False
Promises
Mohiel-Din
Ismail, an Iraqi writer, agreed that such restrictions unveil the
logic of occupation.
They
give the people hollow promises, restrict their freedoms and now
deprive them of the simplest right to demonstrate, he added.
"Where,
then, is the (U.S.-sanctioned) Governing Council? Isn't it - as
claimed - the highest authority in Iraq? Should it wait instructions
from (U.S. administrator of Iraq) Paul Bremer and the White
House?" Ismail wondered.
U.S.-led
occupation forces have repeatedly opened fire at Iraqi demonstrators,
killing and wounding many of them.
Amnesty
International said Friday, November 21, U.S. forces appeared to be
destroying houses in Iraq as a form of collective
punishment for attacks on U.S. troops and warned that the practice
would violate the Geneva Conventions.
Iraqi
civilians are often exposed to random shooting by American forces
whenever occupation troops are attacked.
The
New York-based Human Right Watch accused the American occupation
forces of "excessive or indiscriminate
use of force" against civilians in Baghdad as well as failing
to conduct proper investigations in cases of civilian deaths in the
Iraqi capital.
In
a 56-page report released Monday, October 20, the group documented 20
cases of Iraq civilians deaths between May 1, when U.S. President
George Bush declared an end to the major combat operations in Iraq,
and September 30.