Moderators John317 Posted October 29, 2008 Moderators Posted October 29, 2008 By HAMZA HENDAWI, Associated Press Writer – 2 hrs 32 mins ago AP – People walk through the bustling Shorja open air market in Baghdad, Iraq, on Thursday, Oct. 21, 2008. … BAGHDAD – Engineering student Haifaa Salman has discarded the Islamic head cover she started wearing two years ago after militants threatened to "punish" her if she kept showing up at college with her hair uncovered. "I was forced to wear it," the 22-year-old says, recalling the day in 2006 when two men on a motorbike stopped her outside campus to deliver the threat. But, she adds, "It's different now. Life is normal again. College women wear what they please. The extremist groups are gone." The decision by some women to shun the Islamic head cover, or hijab, is just one of the signs that Baghdad residents are growing increasingly confident in the past year's security gains. Children with backpacks can be seen walking to school. Sidewalk cafes remain open after dark. Families stroll through parks in the sunset. But after five years of violence, many people are hesitant. "Things are much better now," said Ziad Mohammed, a 49-year-old government employee who lives in Karkh, a mainly Sunni Arab district on the west bank of the Tigris. "But fear is still inside me," he added. "I want to get rid of it. Maybe it will happen next year." For now, Mohammed continues to escort his children to school and picks them up because he fears they could be kidnapped. Baghdad remains a very dangerous place, and much of the capital looks like a city at war. Giant billboards appeal for information to help arrest militants accused of "crimes against the Iraqi people," with grainy images of fugitives, mostly bearded men in their 20s and 30s. "I will always be here," declares a reassuring message on other billboards depicting an Iraqi army soldier towering over two boys in the background. Miles of concrete blast walls and dozens of fortified checkpoints dissect the city. Some neighborhoods remain almost entirely walled off, and sectarian hatreds that boiled over into a bloodbath in 2006 and early 2007 simmer below the surface. A cautious Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki rejects calls to remove the blast walls, which have been so effective in curtailing violence. "We will not take that risk," he said this month. "It can be a very costly gamble. They will stay until we are satisfied that we have total control over security." He is not the only skeptical about the durability of the drop in violence in Baghdad — overall attacks dropped to about 100 last month compared with nearly 650 during September last year, according to the U.S. military. "I don't want to remove a barrier and find out later that I had done so prematurely," said Col. Mark Dewhurst, the U.S. Army brigade commander in charge of most of Rusafa, the mainly Shiite half of the city on the eastern bank of the Tigris. "I will only remove them if I can help the traffic flow and at the same time retain the same level of security," said Dewhurst, an Altus, Okla., native with the 10th Mountain Division. The director of Baghdad's National Museum, looted after the U.S. captured Baghdad in 2003, also remains skeptical. Amira Eidan says the museum will stay closed to the public for up to two more years, until security in Baghdad is better. Even some of the women who are doing without the hijab fear the militants. They take the head cover off only in certain neighborhoods. The secular look of liberal-minded women has not escaped notice. "The clothes of female university students these days are shameful and more revealing than party dresses," Sheik Muhannad al-Moussawi said in a Friday prayer sermon in Baghdad's Sadr City district. Suheir Abbas, a 20-year-old Arabic literature student at Baghdad University, doesn't like that some of her female classmates come to class in revealing clothes. "We live in a free country and everyone is free to wear whatever they want," she says. "But we live in a Muslim country, and the feelings of others must be respected." Quote John 3:16-17 For God so loved the world, that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life. [17] For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but in order that the world might be saved through him.
fccool Posted October 29, 2008 Posted October 29, 2008 It's good thing to hear, in light of my sister biting her fingernails every day she turns on the news. I only pray that this whole nightmare will be over soon. Quote
Moderators John317 Posted October 29, 2008 Author Moderators Posted October 29, 2008 I'm sure it will be over in Iraq sometime in 2010, as far as the US is concerned, but it will be far from over in Afghanastan. And then there'll also still be North Korea and Iran to contend with. North Korea is making threats to reduce their brothers to the south to debris. No doubt that is to get concessions out of the Americans, because they figure we will give them something so they won't do anything bad. Quote John 3:16-17 For God so loved the world, that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life. [17] For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but in order that the world might be saved through him.
carolaa Posted October 30, 2008 Posted October 30, 2008 Of course, that is Baghdad, but what about the rest of Iraq? It is not nearly so safe. You also have to take into consideration that many of the neighborhoods in Baghdad are empty. I suppose if everyone you disagree with moves away, it would be pretty quiet and peaceful. I'm not convinced it has that much to do with a "victory" on our part. Besides, if we are really interested in leaving, why are we putting so much pressure on them (threatening them, blackmailing them, whatever you want to call it) to agree for us to stay longer? Quote
fccool Posted October 30, 2008 Posted October 30, 2008 No, I really think that people are tired of blood. I also think they are waiting for the results of the US elections. Gee, I wonder who are they pulling for? Quote
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