http://news.independent.co.uk/world/middle_east/article2964470.ece

'The American forces cannot even protect their great ally' 
By Kim Sengupta in Baghdad 
Published: 15 September 2007 

The customers at the Shah Bandar café were sombre and anxious as they watched 
the news on television and talked about the repercussions of the killing of 
Abdul Sattar Abu Risha. 

The common consensus was that violence will escalate even further and there was 
little chance of peace in the foreseeable future. 

"The security situation had become a bit better because of these extra American 
troops, but now they cannot even protect Sheikh Abu Risha who was supposed to 
be their great ally," said Rashid Hussein Mohmmed, 33, and a Sunni. 

As The Selling of Our Country, a satirical programme about a corrupt government 
presiding over a disintegrating society, came on screen, the mood lightened. 
The appearance of the actors playing Premier Nouri al-Maliki, President Jalal 
Talabani and a succession of incompetent and venal ministers drew roars of 
laughter. 

The production staff of the programme, shown on a satellite station based in 
London, all live abroad. It is claimed that the Iraqi government want them 
extradited for sedition. Mr al-Maliki, the customers in the café would have you 
believe, wanted them shot. 

In Baghdad, President Bush's announcement this week of the withdrawal of just 
over 5,000 troops brought mixed reactions. Most in the streets wanted all the 
troops to go, but there were others, mainly Sunnis, yesterday's enemy for the 
Americans, who felt that would leave them in the clutches of an 
Iranian-influenced Shia government. There was, however, near unanimity in the 
view that no progress could be made until Mr Maliki, seen as a bankrupt prime 
minister, is replaced, and also expressions of disgust that the US ambassador 
Ryan Crocker had recommended that Washington should continue to back him. 

For Baghdad residents, the price they have paid for the fall in violence has 
been the brutal segregation of the city between Shia and Sunnis, physically 
represented by a wall, springing up in the al-Ghazaliyah neighbourhood, which 
this week brought protesters out on to the street. 

Meanwhile Baghdad's infrastructure has continued to crumble. Four years after 
"liberation" and the arrival of a market economy, the electricity supply in the 
city has dwindled to around an hour a day with most households depending on 
generators powered by benzine. The price of the fuel has risen in three years 
from 50 dinars to 450 dinars, the spectacular inflation reflected in the price 
of many other commodities. Access to basic facilities has regressed - a recent 
Oxfam report said that just 30 per cent of the people have access to clean 
water, compared to 50 per cent two months ago. 

In the Karada district, Saad Hamdi Faisal, a 24-year-old restaurant worker, 
another Sunni, wished the report by General David Petraeus and Ambassador 
Crocker had been more honest and of more use to the Iraqi people. "We thought 
it will do something to change the government and lead to a new election which 
will help get rid of sectarianism. But everything will stay the same because 
Maliki, who is himself sectarian, stays in power." Mr Maliki's support appears 
to have ebbed even among the Shia constituency. 

Mohammed Ali Hussein, 19, who manages a computer shop sees no signs of 
progress. "What have we got? Shortages in everything except bombs. No, Maliki 
must go and the occupation must end as well. Let us hope what Bush has said is 
a start." 

And disenchantment with the government spans the class divide. 

At the Hunting Club, an establishment for Baghdad's elite which has seen the 
membership dwindle by 80 per cent in the last two years because of the 
violence, general secretary Maksood al-Sanjary was gloomy. "They say the 
situation is improving, but we have lost members and I cannot go outside my 
home after 6.45pm. 

"I am a businessman so members of my family are targets for kidnapping. We have 
had club members kidnapped and killed." 

But there is a silver lining for some, like Fadal Jassem Shwied, for whom the 
violence and uncertainty at least means employment. Cradling his AK-47 rifle, 
the 32-year-old security guard said "I cannot complain, everyone needs someone 
like me now. I am sure the [Petraeus] report was prepared by the Americans to 
suit themselves but at the end If they leave there will be civil war, street by 
street, and the country will be finished." 

Additional reporting by Omar al-Ogaid


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