Archive for March, 2006
Women and Children First
Written by markfromireland on March 31, 2006 – 8:26 pm
Whenever I go to the USA I’m always shocked at the dire level of poverty in the country. The USA government itself admits that one sixth of its children live in poverty. I’ve been stopped by children and asked for food. Not even money for food just food.
This photograph taken yesterday Thursday March 30, 2006 is of a mother holding her sick child as she begs on the streets of Baghdad. I’ve previously published photographs of Iraqi children scavenging in garbage dumps for food.
When Bush and his corrupt government said they wanted to remake Iraq in America’s image they were, for once, telling the truth.
Go home and stay there most Iraqis believe that Saddams’s regime was better than what America and her allies have managed to do in their racist colonial takeover of Iraq.
That is a uniquely shameful achievement. Well done.
markfromireland
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Jill Carroll Released Rejoice - but remember
Written by markfromireland on March 30, 2006 – 4:40 pm
(Jill Carroll helping to prepare traditional food at the home of Iraqi friends. Photo dates from 2005 and was released by her family. Click the graphic to see full size.)
“Abducted Carroll released in Iraq
US journalist freed almost four months after being abducted at gunpoint on Baghdad street.
BAGHDAD - US journalist Jill Carroll has been released almost 12 weeks after being abducted at gunpoint on a Baghdad street, Sunni politician Tariq al-Hashimi said on Thursday.“She is free and is with me right now,” Hashimi said, but did not give further details.
The journalist, who was freelancing for the Boston-based Christian Science Monitor, was seized on January 7 in the Iraqi capital by armed men who shot dead her interpreter.
Her release came a week after US and British forces rescued three other Western hostages who had been held captive in Iraq for almost four months and followed an appeal by her twin sister Katie on Wednesday.
Hashimi said Carroll, 28, did not wanted her pictures to be taken by the media.
Carroll had appeared in three videos broadcast on Arab television since she was seized while she was on her way to meet Sunni politician Adnan al-Dulaimi at his office in Baghdad.
Carroll’s captors set numerous deadlines threatening to kill her if US-led forces failed to release all female detainees in Iraq.
“It has been nearly two months since the last video of my sister was broadcast. We have had no contact with her nor received any information about her condition,” Katie Carroll had said in her appeal on Dubai-based Al-Arabiya television.
“I’ve been living a nightmare, worrying if she is hurt or ill. There is no one I hold closer to my heart than my sister and I am deeply worried wondering how she is being treated. No family should have to endure having their loved one taken away from them in this way,” she said.
She said her sister, who lived in Iraq for three years, “has many Iraqi friends, and respects their culture. My sister has always had special praise for the strength and resilience of Iraqi women and mothers.
“I also hope that those with Jill have come to know her - that they recognize what a wonderful person she is and realize that they can show the world that they are merciful to an innocent woman by returning her safely home to us,” she said.
Last Thursday, the three aid workers from the Christian Peacemaker Teams - Canadians Harmeet Sooden, 32, and Jim Loney, 41, and Briton Norman Kember, 74 - were found together in a house in western Baghdad. They were bound, but the house was otherwise empty and not a shot was fired.
Their US colleague Tom Fox, seized with them in Baghdad on November 26, was slain three weeks ago and his body found dumped in the city.
At least 430 foreigners are known to have been taken hostage in Iraq since the March 2003 US-led invasion, a US diplomat said in Baghdad earlier this month. They include around 40 US nationals, some of them Iraqi-Americans. “
As we celebrate Jill Caroll’s release let us remember that her interpeter Allan Enwiya’s widow is mourning her husband who was murdered during Jill Caroll’s abduction. That thousands of Iraqis are being kidnapped, tortured, murdered, orphaned , made homeless. That journalists in particular are being targetted. Let us also remember the families of those soldiers in the armies of occupation who have had members of their family killed, wounded, mentally scarred. Rejoice yes, but keep the pressure up.
I’ll leave the last word to a gracious and courageous woman who has undergone a terrible ordeal:

markfromireland
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For One Old Brit In Particular
Written by markfromireland on March 30, 2006 – 8:52 amPosted in Previous Site | 5 Comments »
Shadow of a Gunman
Written by markfromireland on March 30, 2006 – 7:48 am“There is an ugliness that can be made beautiful, and there is an ugliness that can only be destroyed, and this is part of that ugliness.”
- Sean O’Casey. “Shadow of a Gunman” Act 2.
Leave Iraq Now.
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Aromatic, Joyful, Singing
Written by markfromireland on March 29, 2006 – 7:43 am
This is Shad Mohammed, she’s a six year old girl from Baghdad. On Monday March 27th 2006 she became an orphan. “Shad” is a contraction, a nickname, her full given name could be either “Shadha” which means “Aromatic,” or Shadiya which means “Singing, as in ‘Singing for Joy’ ” or perhaps Shadmani which means “Joy or happiness.” Either way she was given her name by two people in joy and love and happiness that she’d been born and nurtured her as best they could.
Look carefully at her. She’s been dressed with care and love by her parents, her hair has been dressed, and now she’s covered in blood and being comforted by a neighbour. Look at her face - the poor child is numb. So would you be if the two most important people in your world had just been killed in front of you. God help her when the numbness wears off. I doubt if her life is going to be aromatic, or joyful, or one with much singing in it for a hell of a long time. She is now an orphan in an impoverished society being callously and wantonly ripped apart by the “Multi National Coalition.” Her prospects are grim.
Her parents were killed in an attack by what the Western media obediently taking their cue from US and UK military spokesmen refer to as “insurgents.” We’ll probably never know who killed her parents. Or why. They were just more “collateral damage” as is Shad. Whoever murdered her parents was doing just what George W. Bush his corrupt henchmen and his ally Tony Blair wanted them to do. The blood covering this child is on their hands quite as much, if not more, as on hands of the men who murdered Shad’s parents.
markfromireland
Tags: Children, Orphans
Posted in Children, Iraq, Photos, Previous Site | 11 Comments »

