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Created on Thursday, 12 April 2007 01:37
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Written by Dahr Jamail
Refugees Speak of Escape from Hell
Inter Press Service
by
Dahr Jamail

DAMASCUS, Apr 11 (IPS) - Refugees from Iraq scattered around Damascus describe hellish conditions in the country they managed to leave behind.
"I used to work with the Americans near Kut (in the south)," Sa'ad Hussein, a 34-year-old electrical engineer told IPS. "I worked for Kellogg, Brown & Root in construction of an Iraqi base there, until I returned to Baghdad and found a death threat written on a paper which was slipped under my door. I had to flee."
Hussein, who left three months back, described Baghdad as a "city
of ghosts" where black banners of death announcements can be seen
hanging on most streets. The city, he said, lives on an hour of
electricity a day, and there are no jobs to be had.
"I was an
ex-captain in the Iraqi Army, and I think that's why I was threatened,"
he said. Asked how many of his former army colleagues had also received
death threats, he replied, "All of them." He said it was not safe for
him to go back to the Iraqi Army because it was likely he would be
killed.
"Most of the deaths are due to the Iraqi politicians and their militias," he added.
Security,
electricity and potable water supply, healthcare and unemployment are
all much worse than during the reign of former Iraqi president Saddam
Hussein, refugees say.
"The Americans are detaining so many
people," Ali Hassan, a 41-year-old man from the Hay Jihad area of
Baghdad told IPS. "My brother was killed by Shia militiamen after he
refused to give them the keys to empty Sunni houses we were looking
after."
Hassan, a Shia who fled Baghdad just three months ago
told IPS, "Now I can't go back. I am a refugee here, and I still don't
feel secure because I still fear the Mehdi Army." The Mehdi Army is the
militia of Shia cleric Muqtada al-Sadr.
"So many Iraqis never
leave their homes now because they are too afraid to go out due to the
militias," Abdul Abdulla, a 68-year-old man who fled Baghdad with his
family three months ago told IPS.
Abdulla said Shia militia members waited on the outskirts of his neighbourhood to detain anyone trying to leave.
"We
stay in our homes, but even then some people have been pulled out of
their own houses," he added. "These death squads arrived after (former
U.S. ambassador John) Negroponte arrived. And the Iraqi Government is
definitely involved because they depend on them (militias)."
"I
was injured because I was near a car bomb which killed my daughter,"
Eman Abdul Rahid, a 46-year-old mother from Baghdad who fled her home
late last year told IPS. "There is killing, and the threat of killing,
and explosions daily in Baghdad."
Rahid said the Bush administration was responsible for creating the situation.
"America
is the reason why Iraq was invaded, so we would like the American
administration to give aid to us refugees," she added. "I would like
people to read this and tell Bush to help us."
"Things are getting so much worse in Iraq," Salim Hamad, a refugee in the Yarmouk refugee camp in Damascus told IPS.
"There
is a big difference between those who left four years ago and those who
left four days ago," Hamad said. "Everything in Iraq is based on
sectarianism now and there is no protection -- neither from the
Americans nor the Iraqi government."
The U.S. military claimed
last week that there had been a 26 percent drop in sectarian bloodshed
in the capital in March after the Baghdad Security plan was launched in
February.
But, U.S. military spokesperson Maj. Gen. William
Caldwell told reporters at a press conference in Baghdad that violence
throughout the rest of the country has not reduced.
"When you
look overall at the country at large," he said, "you have seen...not a
great reduction that we had wanted to see thus far."
More than
600 people were reported killed in sectarian violence across Iraq last
week, and car bombings continue to hit the capital.