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Iraqi militia targets fleeing families
The Scotsman ^ | March 29, 2003 | Gethin Chamberlain

Posted on 03/28/2003 7:26:26 PM PST by MadIvan


Refugees hurry out of Basra. Many of the citizens fleeing the city were attacked by Iraqi mortars as they made their escape.

THE crowd was halfway across the concrete and steel bridge when the mortar rounds started falling on the Basra side. Men, women and children screamed as they ran to escape Iraqi machine-gun fire.

A thousand people, maybe more, ran for their lives. A young woman fell, hit by shrapnel as a pick-up truck broke cover and charged forward, the machine-gun mounted on its roof spewing bullets at the crowd.

On the British side, a tank lurched forward, the gunner training his sights on the truck a few hundred yards ahead. One shot and the truck was blown apart, the three people in it killed in an instant.

Around the British positions, mortar shells were falling, the Black Watch firing back.

The crowd had made it safely across the bridge, hands raised as they ran towards the troops, ducking for cover as the British guns moved round to cover their escape.

They began moving along the road in the direction of Az Zubayr. They may take shelter there or camp out in the countryside around.

A young woman, badly hurt, was plucked to safety by a British vehicle and driven back across the lines. Others were also injured and medics rushed to tend their wounds.

Then came the clatter of rotor blades and two Lynx helicopters appeared, hovering over to the right, just visible between the concrete pillars holding up the bridge. They hung in the air for what seemed an age before releasing their missiles, guiding them into the target on the other side of the canal, then tilting and peeling away.

On the Iraqi side of the Shatt al-Basra canal, the missiles struck two positions manned by the Saddam Fedayeen, the militia who were holding out in the besieged city.

In the turret of his Warrior armoured vehicle, Lieutenant Colonel Mike Riddell-Webster, the commanding officer of the Black Watch, raced back to the British positions on the west side of the bridge. Its radio crackling with reports from his unit, the Warrior rattled to a halt.

The crowd had appeared at about 8am, he said, clearly desperate to flee the city. British tanks had held them at the far bank before the decision was taken to let them cross.

"We gave permission for them to come through, but there was no firing then," he said. "The people were overjoyed when we let them through, they were blowing kisses and waving their hands in thanks. As they came across the bridge, the Iraqis opened up with 50mm mortar fire. The intent was clearly to stop their own people moving across.

"Then a pick-up with a machine-gun mounted on the back came down the road and opened fire on our troops and the civilians. The machine gun was firing into the crowd. One of our tanks fired back and destroyed it, and the three people inside it. Any time we moved between our vehicles, more fire came in, hitting the vehicles.

"One of our lads had a bullet rip through his smock, which was a bit close. They wanted to get out and away. Most are heading for Az Zubayr and the farms around there, but they are not really aware of what is going on in the town so many of them will camp out in the fields.

"They want to get away but when they came across the bridge, they had their hands up. They were scared of us as well. They don’t know what is going on, but they are more scared of the Baath Party."

On the far side of the bridge were 200 or more civilians who could not get shelter on either side of the road, terrified of moving in case they came under fire. Behind them, huge plumes of black smoke drifted eastwards from the fire pits filled with oil lit by the Iraqi defenders. Across a flat landscape, there was a smell of burning oil in the air.

Inside the British compound, Warrior armoured vehicles kept their guns trained on the opposite bank, but the Iraqi guns had fallen silent. Lines started to move back across the bridge again in both directions, people coming back from Az Zubayr passing those determined to get out of Basra at the centre of the span where a British Warrior stood guard.

A Challenger tank rumbled past, heading over towards Basra and covering the Iraqi positions with its weapons.

In a sand-bagged observation post littered with spent bullet cases at the edge of the bridge, Major Lindsay MacDuff had been watching the break-out.

As forward air controllers guided the helicopters in towards their targets, he recalled that it was the second time the Iraqis had opened fire on their own people trying to escape the city.

The militia have been there for days, he said, niggling away at the British positions, using maybe eight vehicles, with mortars and machine guns mounted on the back, each manned by two or three men.

Major MacDuff said: "Yesterday afternoon, we were about to do a raid and there was a log-jam of people coming over the bridge and the Iraqis fired mortars at us and at the civilians, but this is the first time they have just tried to target the civilians alone. Their ability to get the rounds where they want them to is more than just down to chance so they are clearly aiming at them.

"We can shelter in our vehicles but we can’t get all the civilians in. You can’t get 200 people in the back of a Warrior. We’ve heard of direct fire being used to shoot civilians leaving Basra, which is a worrying trend."

Major MacDuff has been camped out on the edge of Basra for five days, organising raids designed to sap the resistance of the gunmen and encourage the civilian population to rise up against the Iraqi regime. Last night, it increasingly appeared that this was not going to happen without significantly more pressure.

Major MacDuff said the civilian population was eager for the British troops to enter the city, but too scared of the Iraqi regime to take action: "The message coming across is that they are unhappy about life in Basra and they are keen for us to come in and help them, which we are keen on doing.

"But the difficulty is that the conditions for us going into Basra haven’t yet been achieved. We’re keen to go in but we haven’t got the orders to go."

Major MacDuff said even those who want the British to enter the city are facing terrible pressure from the Iraqi authorities to continue the resistance.

He said: "One man came up to us and told us that if we didn’t let him through he would be shot, but the next day we saw him with an AK47 taking action against us, so the pressure they are under is clear to see. Tribal elders are being coerced into taking action against us with the help of a gun to the head or the promise of money. The problem is fear and the regime is working on fear.

"I’m not sure what makes people collectively take the decision that it is time to take action themselves. I think their understanding of what we are is jaundiced because the only understanding they get is through the regime."

The British are using interpreters to try to explain their position to those moving into and out of the city and they hope that the activity against the militia forces is sending out the same message.

Major MacDuff said: "I was talking to the CO about setting up an aid post here to give them food and water but they would just be a target for fire. So until we can make it safe we can’t do it."

In London, the Chief of the General Staff, General Mike Jackson, said British forces were making progress in wearing down resistance from Saddam’s forces in the south of Iraq.

He insisted: "The Iraqi forces in the south are fixed, by that we mean they are pinned down - their ability to manoeuvre is very limited indeed."

However, a British military spokesman in Iraq, Colonel Chris Vernon, said Basra was "nowhere near yet in our hands". He added: "We have no way at the moment of getting humanitarian aid into Basra.

"But as we begin to pressurise Basra and begin to dominate it militarily, it is fixed in military terms. Nothing can move in or out militarily. The key to Basra is to eradicate the Baath Party control and the irregular forces under their control, so the lid is taken off the people."


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; Government; News/Current Events; US: District of Columbia; United Kingdom; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: atrocities; blair; bush; innocentcivilians; iraq; iraqirefugees; massacre; saddam; technicals; uk; us; war
The best front-line reporting is coming from the Scotsman; the detail is sometimes horrific in this case. It is clear that Saddam's regime must go and go now.

Regards, Ivan


1 posted on 03/28/2003 7:26:26 PM PST by MadIvan
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To: proust; swheats; starfish; maui_hawaii; JenB; SJackson; TigerLikesRooster; AZLadyhawke; ...
Bump!
2 posted on 03/28/2003 7:26:45 PM PST by MadIvan
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To: MadIvan
BTTT
3 posted on 03/28/2003 7:28:50 PM PST by Desdemona
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To: MadIvan
We MUST let these troops "take off the gloves" and DO THE DAMN JOB getting rid of this scum.

The more we let them dictate what we can do the more we lose the initiative in clearing Basra.

Time to show these 'militia' what real soldiering means. Rain hell and steel on them.

4 posted on 03/28/2003 7:30:38 PM PST by Pistolshot
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To: MadIvan
What a sight - it would have been - to see that British tank sweep in to protect those Iraqi civilians.....Once again, God bless the Brits!!! Heroes all! (the ones fighting and supportng the fight, that is).
5 posted on 03/28/2003 7:31:57 PM PST by Freedom'sWorthIt
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To: MadIvan
The media were speculating earlier today that it very well could have been that these people were not being intentionally fired upon but were instead caught in cross-fire. It royally pisses me off that they are so willing to give the Iraqis the benefit of the doubt but a bomb that hits a market HAS to be delivered by Uncle Same.
6 posted on 03/28/2003 7:34:05 PM PST by Frapster (*cough*)
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To: MadIvan
Those bad, bad, bastards.

BTTT

(I bet you'll meet a peacenik near you who will say 'Well, if there wasn't an American/UK invasion they wouldn't have to open fire on their own people'.)

7 posted on 03/28/2003 7:34:31 PM PST by Happygal
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To: Frapster
Gethin Chamberlain is right there with the Black Watch; I tend to believe his first hand account over anything other media sources might say.

Regards, Ivan

8 posted on 03/28/2003 7:36:00 PM PST by MadIvan
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To: MadIvan
I believe with the F-15 strike today, Basrah will be liberated by the end of next week. Soon they will be dancing in the streets, we can shove it down the throats of the media hellhounds.
9 posted on 03/28/2003 7:40:18 PM PST by Russell Scott (Iraqi soldier, is it really worth dying for the Butcher of Baghdad?)
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To: Frapster
The Arab media even had a woman who said that the Brits fired on the civilians, intentionally.
10 posted on 03/28/2003 7:48:02 PM PST by tiki
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To: MadIvan
Thank you for this excellent article. God Bless your brave fighting men--and ours! And may God deliver those Iraqis who have been so oppressed from the hands of their oppressors. How anyone can defend the regime of Saddam Hussein is beyond me--and yet that is exactly what so much of the world seems to be doing.

Thank God for the moral courage of George Bush and Tony Blair--and their ability to lead their nations "in the path of righteousness!"

I just wish the Pope and other religious leaders would remind us of the Old Testament stories about the battles God commanded the Israelites to fight against those who sacrificed their children to Baal. I never got the impression that the God of Abraham and Jacob engaged in a policy of tolerance toward those who worshipped a false idol (like Saddam Hussein) and butchered the innocent to gain favor from it!

11 posted on 03/28/2003 8:02:52 PM PST by milagro
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To: tiki
damn where do these islamofascists find these loons?

let me guess. the baathist thugs that were hit in Basra will be called 'civilians'.
12 posted on 03/28/2003 8:10:33 PM PST by WOSG (Liberate Iraq! Lets Roll! now!-)
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Comment #13 Removed by Moderator

To: MadIvan
Again you lads do the great job.

Again, the total failure of those on the left and the elitist POS on the far right to condemn the terrible actions of the evil ones in Iraq is appalling!
14 posted on 03/28/2003 10:23:28 PM PST by Grampa Dave ("Those who are kind to the cruel end up being cruel to the kind!")
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To: MadIvan
Again you lads do the great job.

Again, the total failure of those on the left and the elitist POS on the far right to condemn the terrible actions of the evil ones in Iraq is appalling!
15 posted on 03/28/2003 10:24:20 PM PST by Grampa Dave ("Those who are kind to the cruel end up being cruel to the kind!")
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To: Freedom'sWorthIt
So little of this was reported in our press. It was just like "yawn," they machine-gunned people trying to flee Basra.
16 posted on 03/29/2003 3:16:57 AM PST by fightinJAG
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To: MadIvan
More witnesses than victims here, it seems. But too many victims here not to be appalled at the unconscionable depravity of the Iraqi resistance. Those punks don't deserve to hold that ground, and justice is being dispensed on a daily basis to them and their ilk.
17 posted on 03/29/2003 3:24:55 AM PST by Unknowing (Now is the time for all good men to come to the aid of their country.)
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To: fightinJAG
Exactly. The US and British government should make it their PURPOSE to get stories like this OUT and VISIBLE - it's not too late to work to get this out. IT SEEMS JUST THE OPPOSITE IS HAPPENING - the US and British governments seem to be ON PURPOSE downplaying the worst that is discovered. All it gets is one sentence in a briefing. THAT IS NOT ENOUGH! THAT IS NOT ENOUGH! Shout it from the housetops - display the interview with the commander of this situation - at the least - over and over and over.

Do whatever it takes to see that the entire world knows this story and has SEEN depictions of it. As the man talks - someone else shows a mock up of the bridge and / or computer display of what happened. PEOPLE NEED TO SEE THIS and see it and see it.

18 posted on 03/29/2003 6:21:04 AM PST by Freedom'sWorthIt
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