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Thu. Mar. 27, 2003

Politics in depth > Asia > Politics & Economy

Iraqis Phone in Their Last Wills *

By  Firas Al-Atraqchi

With a rising wave of censorship in America, many websites presenting the “alternative” point of view have been shut down. In our previous feature, dated March 25, 2003, a distinguished commentator, Firas Al-Atraqchi, wrote on the incident of shutting down YellowTimes.Org, one of the best alternative media outlets on the Internet.

Below is an article he wrote two days before the launching of the war on Iraq, published on YellowTimes, that described the state of fear in which Iraqis were living right before the beginning of the war. Some of those mentioned below may have already been killed.

Baghdad residential area brought to ruins yesterday, March 26, 2003

Baghdad residential area brought to ruins yesterday, March 26, 2003

Baghdad is in a state of psychological disarray.

Families with financial means have started to crowd buses leaving Baghdad for the outlying villages, towns, and cities within Iraq, and for Syria, Jordan and Iran.

Iraqis abroad have scrambled to send money to third-party intermediaries in Jordan, Syria, and the United Arab Emirates, hoping their families in Iraq will receive these necessary funds within the next 48 hours.

“I just sent 500 dollars [US] to my sister in Dubai,” said an Iraqi living in Halifax, Nova Scotia, who preferred not to be identified. “I hope she can get it to my mother in Saddam City. She has no one to take care of her -- if the American smart bombs don’t kill her, I am afraid of the civil strife.”

Baghdadis are preparing for the worst after US President George Bush’s latest threats and are fully aware that Iraqi President Saddam Hussein will destroy Iraq before letting someone else take it over


Pray for a people caught between the brutality of two leaders.

“We know he will burn [Iraq]. He will burn the oil, and he will burn himself if need be. He will never surrender. The only way to take Iraq from him is to kill everyone in Iraq first,” said Azad, 38, from Amman, after slipping across the Iraq-Jordan border earlier this morning.

Iraqis are expecting to die in the next few days and seem resigned to whatever faith befalls them. Many Iraqis with the means to do so have phoned relatives living abroad and given them last minute instructions concerning estates, finances, family concerns and wills.

“He told me to look after my children and, after the war, go and look for my father’s home,” said a tearful Inas, an Iraqi widow living in Houston, Texas, as she recalled her brother’s last phone message to her from Iraq.

“He told me to keep my faith in Allah because he is bigger than Bush, bigger than Saddam and bigger than life and death.”


Inspections team was frustrated for the abrupt ending of its work when it was making progress.

The impending death and carnage has put Iraq’s neighbors in high alert status as they rush to erect makeshift sanctuary for an expected 900,000 Iraqi refugees in the next few days. International aid agencies, however, are baffled by the low dedication and involvement of the US government to ensure that they have adequate water, health, and food services for such contingencies. United Nations relief officials have admitted they have less than 30 percent of the funds they were promised.

The chaotic planning and rush to get out of Baghdad comes on the heels of the UN’s announcement that its entire remaining staff was pulling out of Iraq within the next 24 hours.

At approximately 11:00 PM EST, IAEA chief Mohammed Al Baradei received a call from US officials advising him and UNMOVIC head Hans Blix to pull their inspection teams from Iraq immediately.

Former UN inspectors interviewed on early morning news broadcasts revealed that the inspection teams currently in Iraq are likely to express frustration and anger over the derailment of a process they believed was working in disarming Iraq of alleged weapons of mass destruction.

Political and military analysts have said for some time now that the marching orders of the inspections team would serve as the most telling sign that war is imminent.


Americans will only be told stories of heroism and compassion.

Meanwhile, Iraqi president Saddam Hussein vowed to fight the invading US and British forces with knives and stones if need be “wherever there is air, land, sea.”

In the days to come, as the Independent’s Robert Fisk has pointed out, most news from Iraq will be censored. Despite a less than glorious track record, Aljazeerah news will likely be the most reliable source of news.

Thankfully, the American public will be spared the scenes of carnage, devastation and mass death about to be inflicted on the Iraqi people.

They will only be told war stories of heroism and compassion.

The compassion of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

The only thing that remains right now is to pray, although I believe the Iraqi people may have given up on that temporarily.

So pray for the Iraqi people. Pray for a people caught between the brutality of two leaders.

God bless the Iraqi people. God bless Iraq.


* This article was originally published in YellowTimes.Org. You can reach YellowTimes on their emergency e-mail yellowtimes@hotmail.com

Firas Al-Atraqchi is a Canadian journalist of Iraqi heritage. Holding an MA in Journalism and Mass Communication, he has eleven years of experience covering Middle East issues, oil and gas markets, and the telecom industry. You can reach him at firascape@hotmail.com.

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