Iraqis Flock to ‘the Mother of All Flea Markets’
| Wednesday April
16, 2003
Mohammed Alkhereiji, Arab
News War Correspondent BAGHDAD, 16 April 2003 — On Yasser Arafat Street, one of
Baghdad’s busiest shopping areas, the shops are open and shopkeepers
are scrubbing the street and sidewalks outside them. Fruit and vegetable
markets are bustling, and families are out promenading with smiles on
their faces. The local barbers, too, are open for business and Arab News walked in
on Mohammed Al-Sa’ali, who was enjoying his first haircut since the
war started. “I’m getting my haircut to celebrate Saddam’s demise and the
beginning of a new era,” he declared. Ironically, a picture of the former Iraqi dictator was still hanging
on the wall a few meters away from him. In the Abu Ghorab district on the outskirts of Baghdad, the mother of
all flea markets has been set up, and those who looted the capital’s
government and other buildings are selling their booty — cigarettes,
furniture, sportswear lingerie — at knockdown prices. Nike sneakers
were being sold for $2. There is also a huge black market in gasoline. Saddam’s army had
massive gasoline reserves and in some areas of Baghdad locals are
filling their containers with it and selling it at massively inflated
prices. In the Rumadi area 120 miles west of Baghdad, a group of the town’s
imams, led by Imam Ali Zeleami, came to a cease-fire agreement with
coalition troops, whereby the troops will occupy only the outskirts of
the mostly calm area. Security at the Palestine Hotel in central Baghdad has been beefed up
in reaction to an ambush staged two days ago by four Iraqi sympathizers
of Saddam Hussein. At 6 a.m. yesterday, a fleet of helicopters circled above in what the
US military described as “a routine security operation”. Cars are no
longer allowed to park near the hotel, which is home to most of the
foreign journalists in the capital, and US Marines are redirecting the
ocean of human traffic away from it. The capital still lacked power, water and medical care yesterday, and
troops were turning their attention to that as well as the question of
law and order. A group calling itself the Gathering for Democracy issued printed
statements urging fellow Iraqis to stop looting public facilities.
Groups of Marines were on foot patrol in some neighborhoods, some with
children tagging along, and as many as 1,000 Iraqi policemen showed up
for joint Iraqi-US patrols. Dressed in full uniform, the Iraqi police are patrolling the city in
10 different fleets in groups of four. Sixteen of them are helping the
US military with security at Al-Andalus Square. “Most are concerned
about the looting and the security of the neighborhoods,” officer
Yusuf Al-Qubasi told Arab News. “We are understaffed, but it is our duty to try and bring order
back to Baghdad.” When asked if he and his fellow officers would fight Saddam’s
Fedayeen alongside the US military, he said that he had not yet been
asked to do so, but depending on the circumstances “I might have
to”. |
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