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At the Checkpoint…**

By Sara Khorshid
Staff Writer – IslamOnline

03/06/2004

US soldier searches Iraqi schoolgirls at a checkpoint in Baghdad.

“Why are you searching our car?” Yasser Anas*, a 57-year-old Iraqi, asked a US soldier at a checkpoint in Al-Dorah in Baghdad.

“Shut up,” the soldier replied.

“This is not a prohibited area. I am not violating the law. I am here just to drop my friend over there. I’ll be back in two minutes.”

“Don’t talk with me,” the soldier ordered, grabbing Yasser aside.

“I don’t hate the American people but these actions…”

“If you talk again, I’ll put you in jail.”

At checkpoints, American soldiers don’t talk much to Iraqis, they act: they search people and vehicles, they point their weapons at Iraqi targets, and sometimes they kill or they burn cars.

Now that checkpoints are spread all over Baghdad, ordinary Iraqis have to encounter them on an almost daily basis. “‘Allah ma`ak [May Allah be with you]’ we tell each other before going outdoors,” says Aghadeer Mohammed, an Iraqi journalist.

“Approaching a checkpoint, you find weapons pointed at Iraqis.…Even my two-year-old son, they point their weapons at him and they search him. How would a kid feel when he finds a machine gun in his face? This is scary, especially for women and children.”


“Even my two-year-old son, they point their weapons at him and they search him.”


Not only scary, but also humiliating. “Humiliating, because this is my neighborhood, this is my land. That he [the occupier] closes it [with a checkpoint] and takes it is unbearable,” Aghadeer proclaims. Dignified and proud, Iraqis don’t accept foreign soldiers searching their bodies and giving or denying them permission to move from one place to another inside their own country. But at checkpoints, they don’t have a choice. 

“American soldiers behave in a very wild manner, they get to employ their weapons quickly, and we all prepare ourselves to avoid their anger,” says Kazim Ghagrash, Aghadeer’s husband, who is also a journalist. Human Rights Watch concurs with Kazim in its 2004 World Report: “At checkpoints…edgy U.S. soldiers have resorted to lethal force with distressing speed…[which] put[s] civilians at risk.”

So, obliged to obey the occupiers’ orders, Iraqis can only “look at US soldiers at checkpoints, with dissatisfaction in their eyes,” while inside, their blood boils.

Permanent and mobile checkpoints barricade the city’s roads and seal off some of its neighborhoods, causing serious traffic jams. The purpose of many of the “checkpoints” is not to search passers, but to block the flow of Iraqi cars until occupation forces’ vehicles pass through. Hundreds of cars are usually kept waiting in line for hours before they would be allowed to get to work or school. “They don’t care about the fact that checkpoints are blocking the roads and I am going to work; they just don’t care,” says Kazim. Sometimes they let him through with his car; when they don’t, he walks to work. 

Another Iraqi, Salam Onibi, is a computer engineer who also works as a driver for some NGOs. Every day Salam drives his car in Baghdad’s streets; every day he has to draw a map in his head for roads he can take without running into checkpoints.

He can’t escape them altogether, though. On the highway linking Al-Mahmoudiya and Al-Haswa, Salam was waiting in his car among hundreds of cars that had been waiting for over four hours. As he could speak English, he dared to ask an American soldier about the reason for the delay. “Sometimes the reasons they give me make me wish I didn’t speak English,” Salam says, “because they are reasons that offend you and indicate the stupidity of who put them. Because they are like the excuses made to children.”

“We are trying to block the road so that cars would later move smoothly,” came the soldier’s response to Salam’s question. Salam didn’t understand what the soldier meant, so he repeated the question. Another weird reply: “When you leave the cars, they gather on the road, then when you block the road, they will move together.” Salam and the two journalists with him in the car kept laughing at the soldier’s answer all the way to Najaf. 

Perhaps the answer Salam got was just ridiculous. Other American soldiers would respond in a more aggressive manner. Eyad Mansour*, an Iraqi dentist, came across a checkpoint with his cousin, who told one of the US soldiers in charge, “You cause traffic jams,” which was true. The soldier began cursing all Iraqis, and he brought his colleague, who said, “We should have nuked the f—— out of this f—— land.” 


Many Iraqis lose their lives due to the invisibility of checkpoints in the dark.


“Then they pulled us out of the car and thoroughly searched us and our car, simply because we told them about their causing of traffic jams. They delayed us a lot and caused us problems,” Eyad says. “It seems that some of the soldiers truly hate Iraq and the Iraqi people.” And it seems that “American soldiers find no problem at all in delaying Iraqis for hours, even in the hot, sunny whether,” according to Ahmed, a political science student in Baghdad University. 

At least Eyad and his cousin got an answer, even if it was an obscene one.

The case of Jaber Ali*, an Iraqi translator, is different: “When you ask them… they don’t answer. They just give you provocative looks or they wave their hands in a way that indicates disrespect for the Iraqi citizen, in a humiliating way” coercing Iraqi citizens to stand still in the face of humiliation. “They kill whoever doesn’t obey their orders. Really. They kill him and burn his car.”

They killed Jaber’s in-law, Kairm Hatem Talboukh, a 40-year-old Iraqi driver. In late November, 2003, Karim was driving his Kia on his way to Al-Taji Gas Factory, north of Baghdad, in order to pick up Iraqi workers from the factory and drop them at their homes. He didn’t see the checkpoint in Al-Taji area. “One couldn’t even see one’s own hand; it was 10 p.m. and very dark because the area is an open, agricultural one,” Jaber says. Karim failed to stop at the checkpoint that he didn’t see, so he was shot dead and his car was burned.

An isolated incident? No. Sad stories abound. Human Rights Watch reported, for example, the story of `Adil `Abd Al-Karim Al-Kawwaz and his family. `Adil wasn’t aware of the existence of a mobile checkpoint and failed to stop at it, so US soldiers opened fire, killing him and three of his children, the youngest of whom was eight years old. 

Many Iraqis lose their lives due to the invisibility of checkpoints in the dark.

Others die when soldiers use “hand signals or verbal orders that Iraqis did not understand, sometimes with fatal results,” Human Rights Watch said in a 2004 report.

The danger posed to Iraqis by US soldiers’ conduct at checkpoints and roadblocks was eloquently portrayed by an American teacher and writer who visited Iraq in April 2004. Nearing Baghdad, Aisha Robertson came across a roadblock, which neither she nor her driver knew whether they could pass or not. An American soldier waved his hand to them “but it was not clear as to his meaning—even I as an American could not understand what he meant by his wave. We didn’t understand whether we could pass or not. I immediately thought of the numerous Iraqis who have been killed in their cars while approaching roadblocks such as this one.”

Sadness can be seen in Iraq’s streets. “Our hearts bleed when we see those checkpoints all around our roads, our roads that used to be clean and beautiful,” Aghadeer says. Baghdad’s streets are now full of barbed wire and three-meter- high (10-foot) concrete barriers, which remind Kazim of Palestine. 


“Our hearts bleed when we see those checkpoints all around our roads, our roads that used to be clean and beautiful.”


US soldiers set up mobile checkpoints, then, when they decide to move, they don’t bother to clean up, carelessly leaving behind the barbed wire they used, around and over which garbage piles up. Kazim describes the landscape as upsetting; he laments that his city, Baghdad, “lost its beauty.” It was once “the best of places, known by green and cleanness.” Now, it is like “a military camp” to Aghadeer and Kazim.

Remains of checkpoints are souvenirs, a reminder of the occupation of their country. Through checkpoints “the troops keep reminding you that we are under siege,” Dr. Ali, an Iraqi psychiatrist, remarks. Kazim says that “the goal is to say ‘we are here,’” prevailing, in a country that is not theirs, imposing their will on its very nationals.

Some Iraqis left their life-long homes, fleeing the tough procedures that they have to undergo in order to enter or exit their neighborhoods. Many families who used to live in the so-dubbed Green Zone moved from their neighborhood, which is now confined by “coils of razor wire, chain-link fences, earthen berms and armed checkpoints,” according to GlobalSecurity.org. They couldn’t bear living in an area that now “appears under siege.” Without having a permit issued by US forces, you can’t enter the Green Zone. “Sometimes they deny you entry even after you have a permit issued,” Aghadeer points out.

As a journalist, Aghadeer used to go to the Green Zone frequently, from 1984, during Saddam’s reign, but not anymore. Occupation authorities don’t let her in. “Under Saddam’s rule, the area was completely open; it had residential places, a clinic, schools... [now] I can see fear on the faces of pupils and teachers going to and coming from the Green Zone.”

Baghdad’s Green Zone is a four-square-mile area where occupation forces authorities are based, the very area that encloses Saddam’s luxurious palaces that saw his years of glory. Those palaces were always mentioned by American leaders and spokespersons whenever the US-sponsored, UN-imposed sanctions—which claimed the lives of thousands of Iraqis—were criticized. In a typical pro-sanctions statement: The sanctions are effective and it is Saddam Hussein who embezzles the oil-for-food money and spends it on his own lavish palaces rather than on the Iraqi people—or so they argued. Ironically, the Americans have now taken over Saddam’s infamous palaces, where they currently live and work. Saddam’s presidential palace compound has become the headquarters of the Coalition Provisional Authority, and after power is handed over to Iraqis on June 30, the bulk of the US staff who will be working for the largest US embassy in the world (in Iraq) will be based in Saddam’s former Republican Palace, according to the Washington Post (January 2, 2004).

It remains to be seen what will be the role of Americans in Iraq’s streets after the “power handover,” given that 138,000 troops will stay in the country after June 30. Regardless, the dignified Iraqi people are not likely to forgive or forget US atrocities at checkpoints: the humiliation, the fear, and the death of loved ones at the hands of edgy soldiers whose mistakes cost innocent lives.

*Indicated names have been changed to protect against possible reprisals by coalition forces

** Based on telephone interviews with Iraqis

Sara Khorshid is staff writer for IslamOnline. She holds a bachelor’s degree in Political Science from Cairo University and is currently studying for an MA in Journalism. You can reach her at sarakhorshid@islamonline.net.

The articles posted on this page reflect solely the opinions of the authors.

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