Residents Struggle to Survive, In and Out of
Ramadi
Dahr Jamail and Ali Fadhil
06/20/06 -- -- RAMADI, Jun 19 (IPS)
- As the threat of a giant U.S. military operation in Ramadi
lingers and sporadic clashes plague the city daily, residents
struggle to cope, both inside and outside the sealed city.
A week spent in Ramadi, the capital of Anbar province west of
Baghdad, reveals that residents are suffering from lack of
water, electricity, cooking gas and medical supplies for the
hospitals. The streets are eerily empty, and it appears that
many people have now left the city, although possibly as many as
150,000 still remain in their homes, either because they are too
afraid to leave or they have nowhere to go.
"We will survive anyway," Um Qassim, a middle-aged housewife
with six children, told IPS. "It is Allah who gives life and he
is the only one able to take it away."
Despite the horrible conditions here, with armed resistance
groups controlling vast swathes of the city, and other areas
subject to frequent shooting from U.S. snipers on the rooftops
of houses, she said that people should be grateful to their god
whatever happens to them, adding, "Those Americans will leave."
The operation is part of a renewed crackdown on what the
Pentagon says is a stronghold of the Sunni Arab resistance. As
the threat of an all-out U.S. attack on the city looms, Imad Al-Muhammadi
with the Iraqi Red Crescent in Ramadi told IPS, "Ramadi is a lot
more difficult than the Fallujah crisis because people cannot
flee to Baghdad and many other cities due to the threat of
sectarian death squads, so it is very difficult to provide them
with safe shelter at a reasonable distance from the military
operations."
Muhammadi said that many of the families who had left are facing
"horrible living conditions in tents, abandoned schools and are
staying under any roof that protects them from the burning
summer sun."
"There is no positive sign on the American side that shows a
different solution from those of Fallujah and other cities which
have been 'deleted' in order to be 'liberated'," he added.
"Civilians, as usual, are the ones living the hardships of
occupation and definitely the ones dying in vain."
According to Maurizio Mascia, programme manager for the Italian
Consortium of Solidarity (ICS), a non-governmental group based
in Amman, Jordan that provides relief to refugees in Iraq, minor
clashes were reported on Monday, mainly in Al-Qadisiya, Al-Mala'ab,
Al-Andalus, Al-Aramel, Al-Aziziya, Al-Qattana, Al-Soufiya, the
city centre (close to Abd Al-Jaleel mosque) and 30th of July.
Additionally, U.S. and Iraqi forces are reported to be attacking
the eastern side of the city in an effort to push into Ramadi.
ICS reports that the number of checkpoints and the frequency of
Multi-National Forces (MNF) patrols have increased since the
beginning of the crisis, making it likely that both the MNF/Iraqi
forces and insurgents are preparing themselves for a heightened
battle.
"The population is still leaving the city and the number of
families in displacement traced in Anbar by ICS monitors is
close to 3,200 now," Mascia told IPS by telephone. "The new IDPs
[internally displaced persons] are mainly approaching Rutba and
Al-Baghdadi, while Heet remains the main destination of Ramadi
IDPs." He said about 1,000 IDP families are present now in
Fallujah and surrounding areas.
However, he added that "Most of the families are avoiding
approaching Fallujah due to the complicated procedure enforced
by MNF to enter the city." Mascia said that the number of
families recorded by ICS is almost certainly low, since his
group only logs families who get direct relief aid from their
workers.
"The Americans, instead of attacking the city all at once like
they've done in their previous operations in cities like
Fallujah and Al-Qa'im, are using helicopters and ground troops
to attack one district at a time in Ramadi," Mascia told IPS
from his office in Amman.
"Access to Ramadi is extremely difficult," he continued. "The
checkpoints are set up at the two bridges and make it extremely
difficult to access the city by vehicle. The only available
option to avoid the checkpoints is the desert way heading to Al-Ta'meem
district."
"The main dangers for the population are the MNF at the
checkpoints and the snipers: both usually shoot at any movement
that they consider dangerous -- causing many victims among
civilians."
According to Mascia, services at the main hospital, as well as
health clinics, is down to a "low standard due to the security
situation and lack of medical supplies".
And similar to the tactics used during the U.S. assault on
Fallujah in November 2004, the U.S. military continues to use
loudspeakers to ask people to either hand over "insurgents" who
are present in their neighbourhoods, or to evacuate their homes
and flee the city. ICS reports that some of the messages have
specifically made reference to what happened in Fallujah.
Correspondents with the London-based Institute for War and Peace
Reporting (IWPR) in Baghdad recently reported on the use of
snipers by the U.S. military in Ramadi: "People in Ramadi...
estimate that about 70 percent of the city's population have
fled in the last week, many of them holding white flags for fear
of being shot at by Marine snipers."
The IPS correspondent in Ramadi also witnessed snipers shooting
at civilians in the city.
"The ongoing violence between U.S. Marines and the insurgents,
air strikes, and outages in the water, electricity and phone
networks have already made life untenable," adds the IWPR
report. "Ramadi residents say U.S. troops regularly take over
houses to fight the insurgents, and combatants on both sides
have been seen using rooftops as sniper positions."
The Association of Muslim Scholars, based in Baghdad, has
encouraged the residents of Heet, which is near Ramadi, to host
those fleeing the city. Some more vulnerable families are also
staying in mosques that are offering shelter to refugees.
An IWPR reporter in Baghdad wrote that a 17-year-old student who
fled Ramadi with his parents, Ghayath Salim al-Dulaimi, said his
relatives had been prevented from leaving by U.S. air strikes
two days earlier.
"Our neighbourhood has emptied completely -- there's no one
left," he told IWPR. "People are leaving in droves and there
aren't any services at all. You can't get to hospital because
movement is restricted."
Responding to a question about the situation in Ramadi at a Jun.
15 news briefing, Brig. Gen. Carter Ham from the Pentagon said,
"I think those who are looking for perhaps a large-scale
offensive may be somewhat off the mark. And I think what we will
see increasingly is the Iraqis finding ways to increasingly
establish the presence of Iraqi security forces, and we'll help
them do that in any way that we can." (FIN/2006)
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