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030422-3 / ru/First Newspaper to Hit Baghdad's Streets Is Red/20.04/picture of a child victim of the U.S.-led war

ru/First Newspaper to Hit Baghdad's Streets Is Red/20.04/picture of a child victim of the U.S.-led war

http://www1.iraqwar.ru/iraq-read_article.php?articleId=3533&lang=en

First Newspaper to Hit Baghdad's Streets Is Red
20.04.2003 [22:15]

It would not be Washington's first choice, but the long-banned Iraq Communist Party on Sunday won the race to publish the first newspaper in Baghdad since the fall of Saddam Hussein.

The eight-page "People's Path" was handed out for free, snapped up eagerly by passers-by hungry for any kind of news after the U.S. invasion eradicated state-run media.

"Collapse of a Dictator" read the headline under the hammer and sickle on the front page, followed by an article railing against the abuses of Saddam's "bloody, terrorist reign."

"With the dictatorship's collapse, all the wishes of the vast majority of the Iraqi people have come true," it said, printed around a picture of a child victim of the U.S.-led war, his head bandaged and a tear rolling down his cheek.

When U.S. forces rolled into Baghdad 11 days ago, ending Saddam's rule and toppling a statue of him for good measure, they created an information and authority void, with practically no electricity, no papers, no TV and no officialdom to turn to.

Angry citizens yearn for order and advice, but the last written U.S. information came in the form of airdropped leaflets urging people to stay calm during the war.

Others have moved in to fill the void, with influential religious leaders setting up community services, but the Communists were the first into print.

In Firdos Square in the center, Iraqis stopped in their tracks to read the paper, amazed to see criticism of their former leader in writing.

"It is telling us about Saddam, how he did harm to our country," said 27-year-old Khudair. "Of course we knew it, but we have never seen it written in a newspaper before."

It was not clear where the paper was printed but it was full of praise for Kurdish leaders in north Iraq, which was free of Saddam's control for a decade and where small Communist Party cells operated.

NO MORE BABEL

Under Saddam's 24-year-old rule Iraq's newsstands sold only state-approved papers. Babel, the highest-circulation newspaper, belonged to Saddam's eldest son Uday, while Thawra was the official mouthpiece of Saddam's Baath Party.

They were the last vestige of the old rule to be seen, hitting the streets on the morning of Wednesday April 9 -- U.S. marines rode into Baghdad on tanks.

"The great Iraq will remain steadfast," read Babel's last front-page editorial.

All other parties and their media were banned, and leaders of what was once the most powerful Communist movement in the Middle East had long fled into exile in Britain and elsewhere.

Now the official newspapers have gone, along with state-run television and radio. Iraqis may not miss them, but they are desperate for news. Most listen to Iranian or Kuwaiti radio, BBC Arabic or Radio Sawa, the U.S.-sponsored pan-Arabic station.

The occupying forces' own Alliance Television airs for three hours from 8 p.m. on frequencies once used by Saddam-eulogizing state television, but few Baghdadis have the power to tune in.

If they do, they prefer to watch al-Alam, an Iranian-based channel broadcast in Arabic which Iraqis can pick up without a satellite dish and which first popped up just before the war.

Satellite dishes, banned under Saddam but available discreetly to the wealthy, are now being snapped up.

Источник: Reuters

It would not be Washington's first choice, but the long-banned Iraq Communist Party on Sunday won the race to publish the first newspaper in Baghdad since the fall of Saddam Hussein.

The eight-page "People's Path" was handed out for free, snapped up eagerly by passers-by hungry for any kind of news after the U.S. invasion eradicated state-run media.

"Collapse of a Dictator" read the headline under the hammer and sickle on the front page, followed by an article railing against the abuses of Saddam's "bloody, terrorist reign."

"With the dictatorship's collapse, all the wishes of the vast majority of the Iraqi people have come true," it said, printed around a picture of a child victim of the U.S.-led war, his head bandaged and a tear rolling down his cheek.

When U.S. forces rolled into Baghdad 11 days ago, ending Saddam's rule and toppling a statue of him for good measure, they created an information and authority void, with practically no electricity, no papers, no TV and no officialdom to turn to.

Angry citizens yearn for order and advice, but the last written U.S. information came in the form of airdropped leaflets urging people to stay calm during the war.

Others have moved in to fill the void, with influential religious leaders setting up community services, but the Communists were the first into print.

In Firdos Square in the center, Iraqis stopped in their tracks to read the paper, amazed to see criticism of their former leader in writing.

"It is telling us about Saddam, how he did harm to our country," said 27-year-old Khudair. "Of course we knew it, but we have never seen it written in a newspaper before."

It was not clear where the paper was printed but it was full of praise for Kurdish leaders in north Iraq, which was free of Saddam's control for a decade and where small Communist Party cells operated.

NO MORE BABEL

Under Saddam's 24-year-old rule Iraq's newsstands sold only state-approved papers. Babel, the highest-circulation newspaper, belonged to Saddam's eldest son Uday, while Thawra was the official mouthpiece of Saddam's Baath Party.

They were the last vestige of the old rule to be seen, hitting the streets on the morning of Wednesday April 9 -- U.S. marines rode into Baghdad on tanks.

"The great Iraq will remain steadfast," read Babel's last front-page editorial.

All other parties and their media were banned, and leaders of what was once the most powerful Communist movement in the Middle East had long fled into exile in Britain and elsewhere.

Now the official newspapers have gone, along with state-run television and radio. Iraqis may not miss them, but they are desperate for news. Most listen to Iranian or Kuwaiti radio, BBC Arabic or Radio Sawa, the U.S.-sponsored pan-Arabic station.

The occupying forces' own Alliance Television airs for three hours from 8 p.m. on frequencies once used by Saddam-eulogizing state television, but few Baghdadis have the power to tune in.

If they do, they prefer to watch al-Alam, an Iranian-based channel broadcast in Arabic which Iraqis can pick up without a satellite dish and which first popped up just before the war.

Satellite dishes, banned under Saddam but available discreetly to the wealthy, are now being snapped up.

Источник: Reuters

(1 comments)
Only comments

Ahh Excellent
by Trent Kran guest on 21.04.2003 [00:26]

After a US funded revolution now springs communism. The idealogical yet flawed belife. I'd rather be communist than a corpulent capitalist.

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