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- <text id=91TT0536>
- <link 91TT0498>
- <link 90TT3428>
- <title>
- Mar. 11, 1991: Kuwait:Free At Last! Free At Last!
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Mar. 11, 1991 Kuwait City:Feb. 27, 1991
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE GULF WAR, Page 38
- KUWAIT
- Free at Last! Free at Last!
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Amid the ruins of their capital, citizens celebrate the end of
- their ordeal--and ponder revenge against collaborators
- </p>
- <p>By Bruce W. Nelan--Reported by William Dowell and Lara
- Marlowe/Kuwait City
- </p>
- <p> On Feb. 27, six months and 25 days after Iraqi tanks crushed
- Kuwait beneath their treads, another column of armored vehicles
- rumbled into the capital city. This time the advancing forces
- were greeted with an outburst of exultation that rivaled the
- liberation of Paris during World War II. As columns of Kuwaiti
- and Saudi tanks and personnel carriers rolled up the battered,
- wreckage-strewn expressway into Kuwait City, civilian cars
- formed a convoy around them, horns honking, flags waving.
- Crowds along the way danced and chanted, "Allah akbar!"
- "U.S.A.! U.S.A.!" and "Thank you, thank you!" Thousands swarmed
- onto the streets, embracing and kissing the arriving soldiers.
- </p>
- <p> That joyful scene was staged amid the ruins of what had been
- a gleaming metropolis. It was backlighted by towering orange
- flames on the horizon where hundreds of oil wells, torched by
- fleeing Iraqis, continued to burn and block the midday sun with
- huge curtains of dense black smoke. The eerie pall was a
- visible symbol of the dark ordeal Kuwait had lived through
- during the Iraqi occupation and a final, horrifying week of
- murder, kidnapping and destruction.
- </p>
- <p> Yet even the terrible memories could not still the
- celebration as the troops moved into the center of the city,
- where parking lots were carpeted with broken glass and scores
- of buildings that had been set on fire by Iraqi troops still
- smoldered. Members of the Kuwaiti resistance movement joined
- in the parade, shooting into the air with rifles from the back
- of pickup trucks. Saudi soldiers added to the din with bursts
- of machine-gun fire.
- </p>
- <p> Everywhere the green-white-red-and-black Kuwaiti flag, which
- had been outduring the occupation, fluttered from buildings,
- bridges and hats. A baby dressed in an outfit made from the
- flag was held up to be kissed by the liberators. A woman in
- black robes blew kisses at U.S. Marine Lieut. General Walt
- Boomer, who rode atop one of the troop carriers. "We'll never
- see anything like this again in our lifetime," Boomer declared.
- "Makes you appreciate freedom, doesn't it?"
- </p>
- <p> But with the joy came angry expressions of revenge and
- hatred. Newly liberated Kuwaitis began a campaign to eradicate
- every reminder of the occupation. They shredded, burned and
- even machine-gunned portraits of Saddam Hussein and Iraqi
- flags. A band of youths used a sledgehammer to demolish a sign
- marking the REPUBLIC OF IRAQ MINISTRY OF EDUCATION IN THE
- DISTRICT OF KUWAIT. Others spat on Iraqi bank notes, the only
- legal tender under Saddam's rule, and tossed them into a
- bonfire.
- </p>
- <p> The angry mood was shared by many of the arriving soldiers
- and civilians. One of them, Mohammed Khayhe, a Saudi
- Information Ministry official, surveyed the cold, smoky
- darkness over the city. The electricity had gone off when the
- allied ground offensive began on Feb. 24, and cars were using
- their headlights in the choking billows from the oil fires.
- "It's like a nuclear winter," said Khayhe. "Now that Kuwait is
- free, it's not fit to live in."
- </p>
- <p> That could be literally true. American specialists warn that
- the smoke, which is high in sulfur dioxide, can cause serious
- lung ailments, especially among the elderly and the very young
- living within 20 miles of the burning oil wells. Some
- scientists fear that the acrid plumes will climb into the
- stratosphere, darken the skies, lower temperatures and change
- the weather pattern of the entire gulf region. And, say oil
- experts, it might take until the end of 1991 to extinguish all
- 600 blazes.
- </p>
- <p> The ferocity of the attack on the environment was matched
- by the depredations inflicted on the Kuwaiti people. The
- killing, torturing, kidnapping and theft that marked the entire
- occupation accelerated to an even more barbaric pace as the
- occupiers prepared to cut and run. The fleeing Iraqis
- apparently abducted thousands of Kuwaitis whose whereabouts
- remain unknown. Many Kuwaitis are convinced that the Iraqis
- dragged off the captives to use as bargaining chips in
- negotiations with the allies.
- </p>
- <p> "My uncle was taken by the Iraqis on Thursday," Talal Attar,
- 29, an architectural engineer, said last week. "A lot of my
- friends and neighbors and cousins have disappeared." Enad
- al-Ban, a 24-year-old member of the resistance, said he was
- rounded up by the Iraqi security forces on Feb. 22 after he had
- finished Friday prayers at a mosque; he was one of hundreds of
- Kuwaitis taken almost at random by the security forces that
- day. "They were trying to catch any Kuwaiti they could," he
- said. "They put me in prison, and I was surprised to see that
- 3,000 others like me were also there."
- </p>
- <p> Before Al-Ban managed to escape, he claimed, he witnessed
- a sickening display of savagery. "The Iraqis took a
- six-year-old girl as hostage," he said, and demanded a car and
- cash as ransom. "The parents gave them what they wanted. The
- Iraqis told them to come to the police station and asked them,
- `Is this your child?' When they said yes, the Iraqis shot her
- dead in front of them."
- </p>
- <p> Such tales strain credulity, both because they are so
- shocking and because every war produces stories of atrocities
- that are later called into question. But similar accounts were
- common in the liberated city, and there was no reason to doubt
- them. Almost everyone on the street last week spoke of losing
- a friend or family member. Resistance fighters who went to Adan
- Hospital, looking for five of their comrades who had been
- arrested, found their bodies. Said Tareq Ahmad, 23, a Kuwaiti
- air force sergeant serving in the resistance: "The Iraqis had
- drilled holes in their heads, and they had holes in their hands,
- feet and shoulders as if they had been crucified."
- </p>
- <p> A Kuwaiti doctor too nervous to give his name told arriving
- journalists that Iraqis often dismembered prisoners before
- killing them. "Some of the bodies were missing noses," he said.
- "Some had their eyes taken out. What the Iraqis did was beyond
- belief."
- </p>
- <p> As they began blowing up the oil wells, the Iraqis extended
- their scorched-earth policy throughout the city. They shelled
- and demolished government buildings including ministries and
- the parliament, the national museum, the main
- water-desalination plant, electrical generating plants, tank
- farms and water-storage towers.
- </p>
- <p> A group of 40 Bangladeshis employed at the Meridien Hotel
- were living in its basement. On Feb. 23, they say, a squad of
- Iraqi troops stormed in and gave them 10 minutes to get out.
- "They parked two tanks in front of the hotel and shelled it,"
- says Rafiq Islam Bulu, 29, from Dhaka. "When we came back, it
- was on fire." The Bangladeshis, he adds, lost everything they
- owned. That night the Iraqis also destroyed the offices of Air
- France and Saudi Arabian Airlines, the Gulf Bank and Kuwait's
- largest building, al-Montana complex.
- </p>
- <p> Captured Iraqi soldiers try to blame the brutalities on
- Saddam. Last week the resistance was holding 16 of them, ages
- 18 to 47, at a small house in a Kuwait City suburb. An
- antiaircraft gun stood in the garden, and the garage was
- stacked with grenades and ammunition boxes, one of which bore
- the logo of the Jordanian armed forces.
- </p>
- <p> The prisoners, all reservists, said they had eaten only rice
- and bread containing sawdust for months. They also claimed they
- were terrorized by the Kwat al-Khasa, the Iraqi special forces,
- who threatened to kill them if they tried to desert. How could
- these pathetic men explain the atrocities committed by Iraqis
- in Kuwait? "We are the victims of this war," said one soldier
- who gave his name only as Ali. "One man ruled everything. He
- sent us to Kuwait, which is a friend and an Arab country. He
- did it out of envy." Another chimed in, "Saddam is a bloody
- man. He likes to see blood everywhere."
- </p>
- <p> To Kuwaitis, though, the Iraqi army is a band of criminals.
- "Soldiers is not the word for them," said Ali Abdul Karim, one
- of those celebrating freedom last week. "Thieves is the word."
- The occupying troops would spot a car or a house they liked and
- simply seize it, pretending it was being requisitioned for the
- army.
- </p>
- <p> When the Iraqis finally pulled out on Feb. 26, Kuwait City
- residents were alerted by the early morning roar of engines
- revving. "They were in a hurry," says Jemal al-Mansour, a
- police lieutenant. "They were shouting at one another." Many
- of them simply stole cars, loaded them with looted television
- sets, dresses, china or anything else of value they could lay
- their hands on, and headed toward Iraq. Thousands of them ended
- up in a gigantic traffic jam, where allied planes and
- helicopters bombed and burned them into a tangle of wreckage
- miles long.
- </p>
- <p> Second only to the Iraqis as a target of Kuwaiti rage are
- the more than 300,000 Palestinians who lived and worked in
- Kuwait before the invasion. Because the Palestine Liberation
- Organization allied itself with Saddam, Iraqi forces in Kuwait
- treated many local Palestinians as a kind of auxiliary force.
- They helped administer and police the country and were rewarded
- with special privileges. Palestinians manned checkpoints, for
- example, and were permitted to sell consumer goods in street
- stalls, something that was illegal before the war.
- </p>
- <p> Kuwaitis today insist that the Iraqis were able to round up
- and execute large numbers of military and police officers
- because Palestinian informers led them to the right addresses.
- "Palestinians are no good," says Hiyam al-Bushehery, 24, a
- student. "They stood in the street and betrayed people at
- checkpoints. They told the Iraqis who was in the police."
- </p>
- <p> Now the checkpoints the Palestinians used to man jointly
- with Iraqis are held by members of the Kuwaiti resistance,
- heavily armed with captured weapons. Palestinians who are found
- carrying Iraqi-issued identity cards are arrested and taken to
- the police stations, which are also controlled by the
- resistance. Rumors and warnings that a massacre might be in the
- offing spread through the city.
- </p>
- <p> Preventing bloody reprisals against the Palestinians is one
- of the returning government's highest priorities. Sheik Saad
- al-Abdullah al-Sabah, the Kuwaiti Crown Prince and Prime
- Minister, pointed out in January that "some of the Palestinians
- did collaborate with the Iraqi troops. We shall check on the
- names of these people, whom the Kuwaitis inside know very
- well." But he added, "I don't want to blame all the
- Palestinians. There are many who stood shoulder to shoulder
- with the Kuwaitis." Resistance leaders say 5% or so of their
- members were Palestinians.
- </p>
- <p> Such reassurances have failed to quiet the fears of the
- estimated 200,000 Palestinians who remain in Kuwait City, with
- their doors locked and windows taped. They are afraid of more
- violence like the resistance's bazooka attack on the P.L.O.'s
- embassy on Feb. 24, which left the building gutted and
- blackened. More than 10,000 Palestinians fled to Iraq in recent
- weeks.
- </p>
- <p> Anarchy has not taken over, but the enforcement of law and
- order is shaky. In an effort to keep the lid on, the Kuwaiti
- government-in-exile declared a three-month period of martial
- law. Returning officials are pushing hard to get policemen and
- public-security officers back into Kuwait as soon as allied
- officers have sounded the all clear. The American and British
- embassies have already reopened, with ambassadors in residence,
- though U.S. Special Forces insisted on combing the grounds for
- booby traps. British Ambassador Michael Weston said after a
- quick look around the city, "Barbaric is too weak a word to
- describe the behavior of the Iraqis in Kuwait." Other would-be
- returnees, however, have been told they must wait out the three
- months needed to re-establish the government and its authority.
- </p>
- <p> This has not gone down well with Kuwaitis outside the
- country. Embassies in all the gulf states were mobbed by
- citizens trying to return. They are not persuaded by
- explanations that repatriation will be arranged on the basis
- of a Kuwaiti's usefulness to the reconstruction. A group of men
- at the Kuwaiti embassy in Bahrain complained bitterly. "It is
- my country as much as it is theirs," said one. "I want to go
- back and look at my house." Said another: "They say there is no
- food or water. I will take my own."
- </p>
- <p> Members of the small democratic opposition movement among
- Kuwaiti exiles are even more outspoken, charging that they are
- deliberately being kept away so the Sabah family can regain
- autocratic power. In fact, the return of the royal family is
- almost automatic, because restoration of the country's
- legitimate government was demanded by the U.N. Security
- Council's resolutions. The open question is whether that
- government will revive its canceled experiment with an elected
- national assembly and take other steps toward democracy.
- </p>
- <p> For those Kuwaitis who spent the war in their own country,
- a more pressing concern was repairing their shattered lives.
- Late one night, 20 of them sat on a carpet in a house in Kuwait
- City, as General Norman Schwarzkopf's briefing on the war's
- final offensive flickered on a television set powered by a
- portable generator. It was confusing, one said, because "the
- Iraqis lied to us about everything. We don't know what to
- believe now." The only certainty was that Kuwait at last is
- free.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-