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Iraq-Jordan
Fallujah Emerging As Islamic Mini-State
2004-05-27
To commemmorate Hook’s incarceration in HMP Belmarsh I thought I’d include a piece by Al-Muhajiroun...

The departure of the Marines under an agreement that ended the three-week siege last month has enabled hard-line Islamic leaders to assert their power in this once-restive city 30 miles west of Baghdad. Some were active in defending the city against the Marines and have profited by a perception — both here and elsewhere in Iraq — that the mujahedeen, or Islamic holy warriors, defeated a superpower.

Under the agreement, the Marines handed security in the city to a new Fallujah Brigade made up largely of local residents and commanded by officers of Saddam Hussein’s former army. With the departure of the Marines, the position of the U.S.-appointed civil administration has been weakened in favor of the clerics and the mujahedeen who resisted the U.S. occupation. That is a pattern that could be repeated elsewhere in Iraq after the occupation ends June 30, unless other legitimate leaders come forward to replace those tainted by association with the occupation.

Fallujah, which calls itself the "City of Mosques," provides the religious fundamentalists with fertile ground for wielding power. The city’s estimated 300,000 residents are known for their religious piety. Women rarely appear in public and when they do, they are covered from head to toe in accordance with Islam’s strict dress code for women. The lives of men revolve around Islam’s tradition of praying five times a day. Unlike other Iraqi cities, Fallujah has never allowed liquor stores. Its famous kebab restaurants have prayer rooms, an unusual feature in most Muslim nations. Many of its adult male population wear beards, a hallmark of religious piety.

However, steps taken by the mujahedeen over the past month have gone beyond simply encouraging piety. On Sunday, for example, scores of masked mujahedeen, shouting "Allahu Akbar," or "God is Great," paraded four men stripped down to their underpants atop the back of a pickup truck that drove through the city. Their bare backs were bleeding from 80 lashes they had received as punishment for selling alcohol. They were taken to a hospital where they were treated and released. Residents said a man found intoxicated last week was flogged, held overnight and released the next day. Fallujah’s women hair stylists shut down their shops several months ago after repeated attacks blamed on Muslim militants.

On Tuesday, the mujahedeen expanded their "clean up" campaign. About 80 masked, armed men, accompanied by local police, forced hundreds of street hawkers at gun point to clear out from the streets and confine their businesses to designated areas. The masked men later moved to the city’s used car market and "persuaded" dealers to move away from the city center because they were blocking traffic. In both cases, the police stood by without intervening. According to residents, barbers have been instructed not to give "Western" haircuts — short on the back and sides and full on top — or to remove facial hair. Four youths with long hair were stopped at a market by mujahedeen on Sunday and marched to a public market where they were shorn.

"Are we Muslims, or not?" asked Abdul-Rahman Mahmoud, a 40-year-old father of three. "We are. So, we must apply God’s laws. The mujahedeen’s word is heard and respected, and the same goes for our clerics." There is little sign of opposition to the mujahedeen, though it could be that some people are simply afraid of confronting armed men. Sheik Omar Said of the Fallujah branch of the Association of Muslim Scholars, a Baghdad-based organization created last year to defend the rights of the Sunni Arab minority, insists that nearly everyone in Fallujah really wants Islamic law. However, he hinted that perhaps in some cases, the mujahedeen have gone too far. "This will only come after educating society in religious matters first and then moving on to applying Islamic punishments," he said. However, the mujahedeen are clearly profiting from the hero status they acquired during the April battles against the Marines. There is even talk of building a museum dedicated to the "struggle" against the American occupation. Money has been collected in recent weeks to help the families of those who died in the fighting, said by the locals to number 1,000 "martyrs."
No beers on the verrandah of an evening, no Debbie Does Dallas, No grade II shaves. No fun but ZZ Top beards a plenty. I’ll leave the pleasure of commenting the text to someone far more well versed in such affairs
Posted by:Howard UK

#3  ed, great comments (Loved the Lord Haw Haw reference! It describes almost every talking head on TV today, sadly.)
Posted by: Jen   2004-05-27 10:54:32 AM  

#2  This is an Associated Press article by HAMZA HENDAWI:
yesterdays's link

Isn't it interesting that a Kill-All-The-Non-Muslims Fifth Column Jihadi group feels comfortable enough to post this article verbatim? It's as if Lord Haw Haw was the BBC war correspondent during WW2 or Americans got their war news direct from Tokyo.

Why do Western news organizations employ people who have a vested interest in furthering the Jihadi cause? How many times, before the West wises up, must these "reporters" distort the news passed to us, pass intelligence to the enemy, and set up our people for attack?

Are news organizations so lazy or frightened that they cannot provide the reporters and the level of effort they do at home? After all, this is a bit more important for our civilization than gay weddings or the latest Michael Jackson antics.

Why have we forgotten that information shapes both the battle front and home front? Our enemies have not forgotten this lesson. Go to the Al Jazeera site. There is no mistaking which side they are on.
Posted by: ed   2004-05-27 10:50:03 AM  

#1  So we are punishing Fallujah again. They didn't like King Log, so we are letting them enjoy King Stork (Aesop fable.)
I wonder how much those arrogant, but secular Baathists are going to appreciate being ruled over by Taliban?
Posted by: Anonymoose   2004-05-27 10:33:10 AM  

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