- Tell Me More about the Workers of Nasiriyah Who
Refused to Make Way for War
-
- By GREG MOSES
-
- OpEdNews.Com
-
- Evidence for the story is so scarce to a Western reader that it
seems mythical. As the Mahdi Army of Moqtada al-Sadr advanced through
the city of Nasiriyah, they came upon an aluminum plant. http://peacefile.org/wordpress/
-
- Commanders of the Mahdi Army ordered the workers to evacuate. The
workers refused.
- "Workers of Aluminum Company and the employees of health sector
refuse to evacuate their workplaces and turn them into
battlefields," declared a terse release signed by the Federation
of Workers' Councils and Unions in Iraq (FWCUI). "They insisted
on remaining inside their factories in order to defend them."
- http://www.uuiraq.org/english/46.htm
-
- Something here can be generalized, and "workers would endeavor
to generalize," promises the FWCUI, "in all areas facing
military confrontation between US troops and armed militias, despite
all pretexts and motivations."
- "The civilians," says the FWCUI, "will make sure to
block the armed militias from turning the peaceful residential areas
into centers for attacking the US, British, and other forces, and also
to prevent the occupying forces from remaining inside the cities and
residential areas."
- Journalists in Iraq should tell us more about these civilians who
refuse to make room for war, who refuse to trade jobs for war, and who
apparently place obstacles, literally, in the way of war. "Not in
my backyard," is a worthy headline for so many other
- issues. Why not war?
- Spontaneous action of the aluminum workers could hardly be
attributed to love of American occupation.
- The civilian population of Nasiriyah had been under fire for a year.
Press reports from the Spring of 2003 speak of a city along the
Euphrates River with two strategic bridges. The road from Kuwait to
Baghdad ran over both those bridges. Civilians in the strategic city
faced death whether they tried to stay home, flee, or return.
-
- "In An Nasiriyah," reported the Scotsman of March 31,
2003, "Bodies of men, women and children, including two babies,
lay in a ditch next to the wreckage of burnt-out vehicles on a bridge
being held by coalition forces."
http://thescotsman.scotsman.com/index.cfm?id=378922003
-
- On June 6, 2003, the Iraq Body Count database documents the killing
of a 52-year-old prisoner at Camp White Horse, near Nasiriyah. Says
the website:
- "US Marines said to have 'snapped a bone in his throat,' and
'karate-kick[ed] Hatab in chest.'" Two Marines face courts
martial in that death. On Sept.
13, a
demonstrator was shot to death.
-
- Shortly after Jessica Lynch's convoy got lost in the area, The
Washington Post described Nasiriyah as a "Turkey Shoot" on
US soldiers. "Iraqis mounting the attacks appear to be a mix of
Saddam's Fedayeen, a paramilitary group loyal to President Saddam
Hussein, and regular army soldiers," wrote Post reporter Peter
Baker. "Marine officers said they have found bodies of regular
Iraqi army soldiers with gunshots to the head, an indication, they
believe, that the Fedayeen or Republican Guard commanders have been
forcing soldiers to fight and killing those who do not."
-
- Republican Guards reportedly stayed around long enough to instigate
fights between Marines and local civilians, then were quick to retreat
once the fighting started. In early April, US Brig. Gen.
- Vincent Brooks claimed that civilians around Nasiriyah, "are
now helping U.S. special forces find troops loyal to Saddam."
- So the occupation has been devastating to the civilians of Nasiriyah,
but so has the resistance. In November, 2003, says Iraq Body Count,
children were among the victims killed in a car bomb outside the
headquarters of the Italian military police headquarters. And in March
of 2004, four police were killed, "rescuing civilians held by
militia." Deaths in Nasiriya, it seems, have come from at least
three sides.
- http://www.iraqbodycount.net/bodycount.htm
- In late February, 2004, when an armory in Nasiriyah was apparently
broken into, it exploded, killing perhaps 60 people, according to the
Iraq Resistance Report.
-
http://www.albasrah.net/moqawama/english/022004/iraqiresistancereport_19-210204.htm
-
- With this on-the-ground, in-the-ditch experience of death, it is
understandable why the FWCUI declares:
-
- "We completely reject the turning of workers' and civilians'
work and living places into reactionary war-fronts between the two
poles of terrorism in Iraq; the US and their allies from one side, and
the terrorists in the armed militias, well known for their enmity to
Iraqi people's interests, from the other."
-
- Whatever hope that anti-occupation, anti-imperialist partisans may
project onto news reports about armed resistance in Iraq, there are
people in Nasiriyah who reportedly see only more war and death.
Concludes the FWCUI statement on Nasiriyah: "We will confront the
attempts of these militias aiming at disturbing the security and
stability of the population, and curtail their attempts to push
society into civil war and further destruction and pain."
-
- Yet, as I scroll through the links, searching for more news of these
remarkable events, I wonder, who will further acquaint us with these
workers of Nasiriyah?
-
- Will we ever see more than the brief declarations of the FWCUI?
-
- The most obvious account for why the Western press ignores the
reported "refusal" of Nasiriyah workers might arise from the
fact that the FWCUI is openly affiliated with the Worker Communist
Party of Iraq (not to be confused with the Iraq Communist Party).
- But there may be a deeper difficulty than Western anti-communism.
How do you take time out of roiling war coverage to explain the story
of workers who appear to be taking neither side? How do you stop the
locomotion of endless opposites that structure the conflicts of our
evening news?
-
- As the obscure workers of Nasiriyah confirm for the world, there is
no room for reporting peace once the war drums begin to beat. Peace
news is simply too unreal for the realists of war. Refusals to
cooperate with war raise too many questions, provide too few images,
and risk audience interest. Coverage of al-Sadr, like coverage of the
"embedded" coalition, works better.
-
- Shamal Ali, who writes for the Workers Communist Party of Iraq,
argues that al-Sadr is connected to a pan-Arabic, political Islamic
movement that is not much different from bin Laden's al-Qaeda. He
warns that critics of the US invasion may have found in al-Sadr's
resistance something to celebrate, because al-Sadr is simply opposed
to the invasion, too. But what al-Sadr represents to the Iraqi people,
argues Ali, may be a cure worse than the disease.
-
- In a plain-speaking essay of May 22, Ali argues that, "the
hidden core of the shrinking anti-war movement," may be linked to
a Western failure to appreciate the genius of peaceful alternatives
posed by the workers of Nasiriyah. "Very few in the world are as
stupid as the traditional Left," argues Ali, "so they
encourage and support one terrorist against the other in a conflict
like this."
http://www.wpiraq.org/english/2004/shamal010604.htm
-
- Quoting from a letter that he recently received from a correspondent
in Nasiriyah, "Amidst the recent fighting, the Mahdi army looted
the museum, which was full of antiquities. Their justification was
even worse than their deed. They say antiquities are earthy treasures,
which belong to Mahdi and his army. Some of the stolen artifacts were
found the following day in the city bazaar."
-
- For Ali, the reported museum raid, justification, and trafficking,
"are trivial incidents in comparison to what ordinary people in
Iraq undergo amid the domination of these gangs and their impact on
the destiny of Iraqi society and due to the escalation of terrorist
conflict between occupation forces, the Mahdi Army, and other
militias."
-
- "The crimes carried out by these gangs start from launching
campaigns against unveiled women, bombing liquor shops and cinemas,
calling on their followers to kill communists, seculars or simply
anyone who opposes their dominance. The criminal activities of al-Sadr's
gangs are becoming more diverse and have started from the very first
day the US troops entered Iraq."
-
- On the other hand, another kind of resistance has also been in the
making. Clearly it is an anti-occupation, anti-imperialist resistance,
but it is a resistance that, like the workers of Nasiriyah, would
subordinate the demands of armed struggle to the demands of militant
labor. And it is a resistance that, once again, flies a banner of
Worker Communism.
-
- The Union of Unemployed Iraqis (UUI), for example, sounds from a
distance like a bold experiment in organized resistance of a militant
kind. The demands of the UUI call for livable wages, either with jobs
or without. The demands of the UUI, in fact, sound very much like the
ones made by the poor people's campaign of 1968, the campaign that
Martin Luther King, Jr. was organizing when he was assassinated in
Memphis trying to help garbage workers.
-
- The Iraqi Resistance Report of Jan. 15-17, 2004, says that, "300
unemployed people, most of them former soldiers, rallied peacefully to
call for jobs outside the headquarters of the occupation forces,"
in an-Nasiriyah. "A representative of the demonstrators read a
declaration in which he demanded that government employees be allowed
back to their jobs, that promised stipends be paid to veterans, and
that jobs be provided for all Iraqis."
http://www.albasrah.net/moqawama/english/resistancereport_15-17012004.htm
-
- "In recent days similar demonstrations of the unemployed in the
other southern Iraqi cities of al-'Amarah and al-Kut have ended in
violent clashes and the deaths of several demonstrators from
occupation troop and puppet police gunfire."
-
- On May 14, 2004, the Mahdi Militia ordered Nasiriyah closed to
occupation troops. The militia also ordered all civilians to leave the
town, so that the militia might, "deploy there more effectively."
US, Italian, Korean, and Portugese soldiers are still there, some of
them working on reconstruction projects. But political pressures mount
in their homelands for withdrawal.
-
http://www.albasrah.net/moqawama/english/0504/iraqiresistancereport_13-150504.htm
-
-
-
- Worker Communists of Iraq articulate an interesting position when
they argue that sovereignty can be many things, and US withdrawal may
not be the only thing worth fighting for. Argues Ali, "the US and
allied forces withdrawal probably will mean turning Iraq to another
Somalia." Something besides armed resistance will be needed if
everyone is not to wind up carrying guns.
-
- It is risky business to puzzle out the clues of militant resistance
from internet reports. Ali concludes his May 22 essay with a direct
appeal for support of the Worker Communists in Iraq, including the
strengthening of "armed capabilities." Unfortunately, in an
essay filled with warnings against the escalation of "armed
conflict", Ali's closing appeal for armaments raises questions
that he does not answer.
-
- Still, I would like to know more about the workers of Nasiriyah and
any other attempts to organize something besides more warfare in Iraq,
whether sponsored by Worker Communists or not. If that means asking
the Western media to overcome their anti-communist or anti-pacifist
biases, then please lay my request high atop the body count. Stop
giving gunslingers all the headlines.
- =====
- "Further: the consequences of War, when impartially examined,
will be found big, not only with outward and temporal distress, but
with an evil that extends where in the darkness and tumult of human
passions it is neither expected nor conceived to reach"--Anthony
Benezet
-
- Greg
Moses gmosesx@prodigy.net
http://peacefile.org
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