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NAM Round Table
The NAM Round Table consists of news, insights, visions, ramblings and rants from the writers at New America Media.
[ filed under: middle-east politics ] On Iraq’s first provincial elections since 2005, Baghdad is nearly car free. The government enforced a vehicle curfew for the entire day to prevent car bombs at the polls. For the first time, I can hear the birds singing in the palm trees that stand over the buildings, their chirps occasionally blocked by the sound of jets or low flying American helicopters. In Jadiriya, kids ride bicycles down the streets. Young men lounge on the medians. Boys chase soccer balls down major thoroughfares, moving bricks set as goal markers whenever government, media, or the occasional American military vehicles – Strykers – come through. Iraqi soldiers and National police sit idly in the sun on
I ask 23-year-old, Amir Hassan, a security worker, his thoughts on the elections. “We want more safety. The Iraqi people are tired and we want to rest.” At dusk, I walk out of my hotel to enjoy the tranquil day and buy some fresh bread. I ask the baker whether the election means that Bush was successful with his mission in Iraq. “No, Bush has nothing to do with this,” he says. “Seyyid al-Sistani told us to vote, so we voted,” he said, referring to the powerful Shia Ayatollah in Iraq. “We do what he tells us to do.” |
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