-------------------------
Via Workers World News Service
Reprinted from the April 3, 2003
issue of Workers World newspaper
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INTERNATIONALS IN BAGHDAD DESCRIBE RESISTANCE

By John Catalinotto

They went to Baghdad as doctors, as links to the anti-war movements in
their own countries, as "human shields" defend ing structures vital to
the 5 million humans living in Iraq's capital.

Whatever they came to do, these solidarity internationalists are bearing
witness to the crimes U.S. and British imper ialism are inflicting on
Baghdad. And, by phone and email, they are chronicling the resistance of
the Iraqi people.

Before the all-out attacks started, on March 16, Rosemarie Gillespie,
one of five Australians in a human-shield team at the 7th of April water
treatment plant on the Tigris River in the suburbs of Baghdad, messaged
to the world:

"Preparations for the dreaded bombing raids are now being made in
earnest. Everywhere windows and glass doors are being taped up. Crates
of bottled water are being delivered in haste.

"The price of bottled water is going up. So is the price of a taxi fare
to the border. Most people here seem to be dealing with the threat of
bombing with a degree of stoic calm, going about their business, making
the necessary preparations.

"As Asmaa said: 'We are not afraid any more. We're used to it. We're not
afraid for ourselves, only for our children.'

"Asmaa has two small children, a 3-year-old girl, Meriam, and a 4-month-
old baby boy, Omar. Will they survive the bombing?

"The thought of Australian Air Force pilots, as well as American ones,
bombing Baghdad, possibly blowing up one of the five Australian 'human
shields' or any of the other human shields for that matter, or little
children like Meriam and Omar, seems not only cruel, but stupid too."

The Spain-based Committee to Support the Arab Cause has been organizing
weeklong brigades to Iraq from different regions of the Spanish state
over the past months.

'WE HAVE DECIDED TO STAY'

On March 18, they vowed: "We have decided to remain here in Baghdad once
the military campaign against Iraq by the USA and its allies has begun
and after the Basque Country Brigade has been evacuated." Their goal is
to bear witness to events in Baghdad and to continue to link the now
massive Spanish anti-war movement with events and people in Iraq itself.
The six who signed this statement were soon joined by three from the
Basque delegation.

"Our decision should not be taken as one of foolishness or presumption,"
they wrote. "It is not for the nine of us that you should be concerned:
concern yourselves instead with the fate of the Iraqi people, to whom we
have freely linked our own."

And on March 22, in both a report and a message to the demonstrators
back home: "From 7:20 p.m. yesterday until 10:00 a.m. local time, the
attacks were very intense, especially in the Al Mansur district, a
densely populated area in the center of Baghdad where institutional
buildings (governmental and ministerial) are mixed in with residential
blocks of flats and houses."

Following a solidarity visit to a hospital: "Five brothers-two adults, a
teenager, two children-all burned while they watched the missiles
falling over the city early Thursday night. And so on: up to 36 in one
hospital alone, all civilians, none of them living near any kind of
military or government installation.

"You cannot imagine the impact of the cruise missiles falling on this
sprawling, exposed city; the tremors they cause when they explode,
unleashing a ball of fire and column of dark smoke.

"It is difficult to describe the ominous sound of aircraft flying over
our heads and dropping their bombs. The aggressors are now determined to
break the spirit of this people after trying to do so with hunger and
disease over 12 years of embargo, as if this were a medieval siege." For
more information, see www.nodo50.org/csca/.

TWO DOCTORS FROM BELGIUM

Two doctors from Belgium are now in Baghdad--Dr. Colette Moulaert, a
pediatrician and surgeon and member of the Workers' Party of Belgium,
and Dr. Geert Van Moorter, an emergency medicine specialist and activist
with the anti-war coalition StopUSA (Stop the United States of
Aggression). They both work with Medical Aid for the Third World and
have been in combat situations in the past.

"We are OK here. Last night (March 20) there were air raids for about
three hours," wrote Dr. Van Moorter. "Some of the attacks were only some
hundreds of meters away, less than one kilometer. Hotel Palestine, our
hotel, is on the banks of the Tigris and it was at the other side. We
don't know what they targeted.

"According to Iraqi TV many were injured in Basra. But apparently the
Iraqis put up fierce resistance and the U.S. soldiers had a hard time."

And later, "We tell everybody about the protests against U.S. aggression
in Bel gium and other countries. That is important for the morale of
anybody here," writes Van Moorter. The "human shields" are receiving
permits to work and began doing shifts at a Baghdad hospital. But they
continue to send reports to the movement in Belgium, urging
demonstrations and strikes.

For more reports from them, see www.irak.be/ned/missies/
medicalMissionColetteGeert/two_belgian_doctors_in_baghdad.htm.

MORALE OF THE IRAQIS

Of the ability of Iraqis to resist, the different observers agree:
"Their morale is still intact," wrote Van Moorter on March 21. "People
support one another. The foreign journalists are panicking more than
them."

Gillespie, in a later communication, compared the Iraqis to the many in
England who-while considering Winston Churchill a reactionary--rallied
to him under the bombs of the Nazis, and noted the growing number of
volunteers swell ing the ranks of armed Iraqis in Baghdad.

The group from Spain wrote: "Every morning, after every attack, these
same people go out again into their streets and continue to smile at us,
grateful that we are here, raising their fists or flashing the victory
sign, warm and trusting in spite of everything, asking us to tell you of
their will to resist even when that seems an unimaginable miracle in the
face of the war machine closing in on them."

These internationalists, together with those from Voices in the
Wilderness and independent reporters like videographer Mae Ying Welsh,
are the flesh-and-blood evidence of the world's solidarity with Iraq's
people and a heroic link between the global anti-war movement and the
Iraqis who continue to resist U.S.-British imperialism. n

- END -

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