Visit
Iraq!
PressInfo #
156
August
9, 2002
By
Jan Oberg, TFF director
The Iraq issue must get out
of the "zone of silence"
Scholars do empirical work based on theories and
hypotheses. Journalists profess to describe reality.
Diplomats are supposed to know countries and policies by
being present. Western embassies in Moscow were
particularly important during the Cold War.
This has not been so with Iraq. Generally - a word
that means that there are exceptions - Western scholars
seem to think that they don't have to go there to know or
form their own opinions or influence those of others.
Journalists and their editors don't seem to think that
they should go there before they write their articles and
editorials. Governments are under-informed since many
countries either have no representations, low-level
representations or cover Baghdad by shuttling in and out
from a neighbouring country from time to time.
This is not as it should be. Reports everywhere tell
us that the Bush regime is relentless in its
determination to start a major war against Iraq with the
purpose of toppling Saddam Husseyn. If it happens, as I
presently think it will, we face potentially unspeakable
human suffering, mass killing, refugee catastrophe and
famine - in short, total chaos - inside Iraq,
incalculable regional consequences, Western conflicts,
perhaps a splitting of coalitions and alliances, not to
speak of soaring oil prices and global economic
crisis.
Given the seriousness of the situation for us all, the
extent to which Iraq belongs to a "zone of silence" is
mind-boggling. Leading newspapers and websites may have
small blurbs about it, the US media a bit more, but
always about US planning of war and the US perspective,
not that of the other side. Media in the Nordic countries
have a comparatively large and qualified coverage of
international affairs; but these weeks and months, Iraq
is simply not an issue. And if it is, it is Iraq as seen
from the West, the US perspective.
It's not difficult to go
there
TFF's team simply contacted the Iraqi embassy in
Stockholm and said we wanted to do an impartial
fact-finding mission, talking with as many different
people as we possibly could during a two-week stay. We
explicitly said that we were neither a solidarity nor a
humanitarian organisation, but a scholarly foundation
with an interest in listening to the views as they exist
in Iraq/Baghdad. We wanted to get an impression of the
place and the living conditions. We also made it clear
that our message, if any, is that non-violence is more
intelligent and productive than violence.
This met no problems whatsoever. Neither before,
during, nor after mission did anyone try to "use" TFF's
team for propaganda purposes. All NGOs seem to be
received by the Iraqi Association of Peace, Friendship,
Solidarity and, together with the Ministry of Foreign
Affairs Protocol Department, our team was assigned two
people who were responsible to set up meetings with Iraqi
individuals and organisations we had asked to meet with.
The leader of the tiny Iraqi-Swedish Friendship
Association, a former military turned successful
businessman, rapidly became a friend who really catered
to our wish to sleep as little and work as much as
possible, took us around and tried to open doors.
The mode of operation was simple: meetings with Iraqi
citizens were arranged by the mentioned association and
the ministry; meetings with internationals were arranged
by ourselves. We moved into a small private hotel after a
rip-off at the Al-Rashid Hotel where everybody foreign
seems to be housed. (On the card given to the guest,
there is a dollar price and an Iraqi Dinar price. When
you arrive you think that it is the same price given in
the two currencies, but, alas, you have to add the two
together. One sum goes to the state, the other to the
hotel. This adds up to five star prices which TFF, as a
principle, does not accept.
We could move anywhere we wanted freely, talk with
people in the streets, go to religious places and take
pictures; however, the latter is not without
restrictions. Monuments, most palaces, military,
semi-military as well as political buildings are
prohibited, but without signs saying so. So, you have to
ask. Even many of the thousands of pictures and monuments
of the President are not to be pictured by foreigners.
The country sees itself as being in war.
Getting over the border and
into Baghdad
We drove in from Amman, Jordan. It is about 350
kilometres to the Iraqi border and then 550 or so to
Baghdad. It took us a good hour to enter Iraq at the
border. We knew we should not bring mobile phones in, so
we had left them in Amman. We declared our currency, and
a document was made for each of our computers and
cameras. While waiting we were served tea; everybody is
friendly and polite. Bags have to be opened, but neither
books nor papers are investigated.
The officer in the little office where the items are
declared, shook our hands and said "Peace be upon you"
and "Welcome to Iraq", his hand touching his heart. He
has a Samsung computer on his desk, and while we wait we
can see a young scantily clad woman dance on the screen
accompanied by a small orchestra. We follow it while we
wait for him to do the paper work when he suddenly looks
up and says. "CD from Syria. Good, eh!?" A TV next to his
simple iron bed that he presumably rests on when there
are no immigrants coming, is on goggling without a
picture. This is the first instance of what we would
later experience repeatedly: goods do enter Iraq.
Outside stood 12 white Volvo trucks waiting to enter;
there are oil spills everywhere and queues of old cars
and road tankers. The duty free shop is like any other
and has a wide selection of liquor and wine. While you
can't get wine, beer or liquor at restaurants in Iraq,
you can buy it and consume it in private. Our driver
fills the car with petrol - 200 litres for 4 dollars! We
exchange some dollars with a young boy at the rate of
1900 Dinars to the dollar and off we go.
The sandy grey landscape, flat and stony, stretches as
far as the eye can see into the heat-bubbling horizon. If
you are searching for a few kilos of chemical substances,
or small parts of weapons of mass destruction, it could
be buried anywhere around without ever being found. The
physical inspection project is an absurdity; the only
inspection possible must be built on trust.
Here and there is a small box-shaped home, a flock of
sheep, a small cafe. But there is certainly not much to
see on this 2-3-laned straight road. We cruise at about
150 kilometres per hour, and it is a dangerous road due
to animals on the road side, military transports,
thousands of trucks and drivers who seemingly don't even
know what a driving license is. Very sadly, our excellent
driver took a Swedish diplomat back to Amman by night,
killed himself and his passenger the week after we had
driven with him; he lost control after having hit a
donkey at high speed.
However, military transports and thousands of oil
trucks were directed to another road parallel to the main
road. We see two types of trucks, those carrying oil from
Iraq to Jordan and those carrying other goods, including
a lot of hay. Over the days and months, the former must
add up to quite a few barrels. You meet the truckers when
they gather at small roadside restaurants lined with
small stands selling fruits, vegetables, cigarettes and
dates. The rest are private cars stuffed with goods,
including medicine and other necessities, that may be
difficult to find in Iraq because some country has
demanded it be put on hold without even offering an
argument.
We reach Baghdad around 9 p.m. to a great surprise!
Compared with Amman it is a very lively place. Shops are
open, there is lots of trade, and traffic is dense but
police-regulated, new and old cars are mixed. Colourful
neon lights all over and music mixing from all corners.
Driving by huge boulevards, we immediately see that shops
are filled with customers and goods, cars parked
illegally are carried away by trucks. It's a rather clean
city and the atmosphere is relaxed. Baghdad is estimated
to have about 5 million inhabitants, one-fifth of the
population.
The city is modern, but one easily sees that is a
shadow of what it must have been in terms of renovation
and maintenance. There is considerable building activity
here and there, not the least a gigantic mosque that will
take ten years to finish, new palaces, apartment houses,
and public buildings. One is struck by the hugeness of
Baghdad and its endless high-speed boulevards. While not
without charm here and there, particularly along the
Tigris, it is not a city that reflects an impressive
history or the fact that it has been a cradle of
civilisation.
The countryside and its
people
When you leave Baghdad, the scenery changes and is
reminiscent of poor developing countries. On the highway
toward Babylon, you see half-finished houses, water
facilities out of order and fences with barbed wire where
all the metal has been taken away and only the poles left
naked behind. The typical village is a series of houses
on both sides of the four-lane road with small shops
selling cigarettes, groceries, and vegetables. People,
sheep and a few cows here and there move around in sand,
dust and filth. There is no end to the car repair shops,
of course. There may be large plantations, some
surprisingly green but there are also grey or light-brown
agricultural fields that do not seem to have seen water
for months.
Bedouin men and women in black or white dresses move
slowly with their flock of sheep. Here a demolished bus,
victim of the murderous traffic; there a Vauxhall station
car from the 1950s; further along a Toyota with maize.
Two men try to repair a water pump in the sticky heat,
approaching 50ƒC (122ƒF).
Women, some completely covered in black with only
their eyes visible, fetch water from a well while men
drink tea and smoke under a tree. An over-filled Scania
Bus has seen better days when it passes a type of arch at
the entrance to a village on which a portrait of the
great smiling leader has been hung. You wonder whether,
back in his palace in Baghdad, he has ever been here or
has a clue about the situation 50 kilometres away? Now
and then, but by no means in surprising numbers, we see
soldiers, checkpoints and (unmanned) watch towers.
We ask ourselves whether this is the type of rural
area which hundreds of thousands of Baghdad citizens will
flee to when and if their country is bombed and invaded?
There is no way that they could survive out here. The
whole environment smells of stagnation, de-development
after years of domestic mismanagement and international
sanctions.
Iraq is a very unique country, but in one sense it is
like anywhere I have seen wars: it's the ordinary,
powerless people who pay the price of high politics. They
have no chance to get out of the double cage of domestic
and international politics.
Of course we see Babylon here; it's being rebuilt to a
certain extent. The huge walls and few original stones
and reliefs are impressive. The attempts to rebuild
Babylon and the small tiles inserted with a text stating
that Saddam Husseyn is the builder and protector of it
all, feels slightly pathetic given the misery we have
just passed through.
Hopes among the
disadvantaged
However, we are in Babylon not merely to see this but
to visit some UNDP micro-credit programs. In Babylon town
we meet a young energetic woman who speaks a few English
words. She is in a wheelchair and tells us that she
recently finished her education in computer science at
the Babylon College. She then applied to the UNDP for a
micro credit and got $750 US after having also been
accepted by the Iraqi Ministry of Labour. She was trained
by UNDP and she now runs courses with all types of
students, local (older) citizens, even one in the shop
who does not own a computer but hopes to one day. The
walls in her little combined shop and classroom are
filled with manuals and there are advanced programs on
several of the computers in the room.
The local UNDP people also take us to an unmarried
carpenter born without legs in 1964. He is repairing a
rather large rococo chair with some gold paint on it when
we arrive in his little shop. He has received $500 US and
he pays back about $25 every month. The huge cupboards he
builds by sitting and crawling low on the floor, cost
about $80 US. He has a good chance to repay the loan
within a few years as his business grows. He has just
invested in a saw but his greatest wish in the future is
to be able to buy a wheelchair that cost about $75 US. We
leave with a sense of hope; he has a chance to prosper
because he makes incredible things with his hands and
works hard. It is impossible to miss the pride and the
hope in his brown eyes.
We also visit a bazaar area where a young, round man
has been helped to run a shoe shop. He buys Chinese and
Syrian shoes and sandals in Baghdad for 7,500 Iraqi
dinars a pair (about $3 US) and sells them for 9,000. We
hastily enter all kinds of shops in the bazaar and ask
for the prices. ($1 US = approx. 2000 Dinars) A piece of
soap 250, make- up powder 2000, a blouse 16,000, hair
conditioner 6,000, night gown 7,500, a kilo of olives
1,000, rice from Southern Iraq 200 per kilo, 100 grams of
curry 500, flour 500 per kilo. The ordinary citizen who
has a job will hardly have more than $5-10 US a month,
10,000-20,000 Dinars. Those who have a job, or a pension,
must share it with family and relatives who don't.
Here, like everywhere else and in Baghdad, we meet
only kind, welcoming people. We would not have been
surprised if someone thought we belonged to the West (we
do!), were Americans or otherwise guilty for the
sanctions, a major cause of their misery. Not one person
did during 14 days; we felt safe everywhere. We took
pictures, many asking us to do so, and the children of
course indescribably happy to see themselves on the
monitor of the digital camera. Shop owners invited us in,
offered sweet tea, and showed us their neatly arranged
produce and commodities. Here you may get a pen, here is
something sweet to taste. "Welcome, welcome, wher' you
from?"
The classic Arab hospitality and welcoming attitude
towards the stranger has certainly not been destroyed.
Their gratitude and joy over the fact that somebody has
come a long way to ask them about their lives is so
touching.
These are the people we, who have been there, think of
when we read about the Bush regime's plans to bomb the
country. Even if the peasants, Bedouin shepherds, the
young handicapped computer woman and carpenter and our
bazaar friends may not be killed, their dreams and hopes
- like those of 25 million other innocent Iraqi civilians
- will be brutally crushed.
There is no humanity without
empathy
When you are here, and see with your own eyes, there
are other pictures of Iraq than those you get sitting
back home. One reason that so few scholars, journalists
and diplomats go there is that it opens your eyes to
another reality, a broader human reality, of this problem
called Iraq. It becomes impossible not to sympathise with
the 25 million people sitting for decades in a double
cage.
It becomes difficult to accept that cold-blooded,
emotionally numbed people in your own Western
"civilisation" have nothing else to offer the Iraqi
people than their present lives, where they live like
animals in a zoo (the Oil for Food Program just keeps
people alive on a minimum of calories) and a future of
war. That war is bound to destroy their few simple
belongings, homes, water supply and produce. It will be
the climax of decades of dehumanisation and humiliation.
How could it ever lead to peace and justice?
Only one conclusion is possible when you go there: the
Iraqi people deserve the world's sympathy, not our bombs.
If you go there, you will hardly be able to advocate war.
Not one international staff member or mission chief we
met, most of whom have worked there for months and years,
thought sanctions was an effective political tool or that
an invasion would solve more problems than it would
cause.
If TFF can go there, so can thousands of other
citizens, NGOs, media people, scholars and diplomats.
Please do, and find out about the other angles you never
get here.
© TFF 2002
Tell a friend about this article
Send to:
From:
Message and your name
You are welcome to
reprint, copy, archive, quote or re-post this item, but
please retain the source.
Would
you - or a friend - like to receive TFF PressInfo by
email?
|