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- <text id=93TT1271>
- <title>
- Mar. 29, 1993: Sanctuary Under Siege
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Mar. 29, 1993 Yeltsin's Last Stand
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- IRAQ, Page 32
- Sanctuary Under Siege
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>In the timeless mazes along the Tigris and Euphrates, Shi`ites
- are waging a desperate battle against Iraqi tanks, shells and
- the threat of fire
- </p>
- <p>By EDWARD BARNES/TEHRAN
- </p>
- <p> Each morning the Iraqi artillery begin to find their
- targets. Deep in the standing reeds where the gunners cannot
- easily find them, black-robed women tend their children and few
- remaining buffalo in tiny makeshift clearings, while men, armed
- with old AK-47 assault rifles, crouch in hidden blinds along the
- waterways, waiting for Iraqi patrols. Only at nightfall, when
- the government troops return to their bases, can the men creep
- back to their families to sleep.
- </p>
- <p> Saddam Hussein's writ does not extend over the 6,800 sq.
- mi. of marsh that covers southern Iraq. There Shi`ite army
- deserters and Marsh Arabs who rose in rebellion after Iraq's
- defeat in the Gulf War carry on their fight against Saddam. But
- they fear that their struggle may be doomed now that Baghdad has
- undertaken the systematic despoliation of the age-old Shi`ite
- sanctuary in the marshes. Over the past 20 months, according to
- captured documents and engineering plans now trickling out of
- Iraq, the government has nearly completed work on a huge proj
- ect of four major canals and dozens of dams and embankments that
- will sap the water from the reeds and open the isolated reb el
- strongholds to Iraqi tanks, possibly as early as this summer.
- "We no longer think of victory," says a Shi`ite leader based in
- neighboring Iran. "Our rifles are no match for his tanks. If
- Saddam falls, it will have to be to someone else. We continue
- to fight simply because not to do so would mean certain death."
- </p>
- <p> Draining the swamps is only part of Saddam's campaign to
- subdue the south. Iraqi military units have effectively
- encircled the area, enforcing a near total economic blockade and
- cutting off escape routes into Iran. Government artillery
- regularly bombards the marshes, and mines have been strewn
- across the landscape. Army forays into the villages bring terror
- to the 200,000 local Marsh Arabs. A captured Iraqi document
- details the elements of the siege: "the withdrawal of all
- foodstuffs, a ban on the sale of fish, prohibiting means of
- transportation to and from these areas." The document also calls
- for mass arrest, assassination, poisoning and burning of houses.
- </p>
- <p> The 10,000 ill-equipped and ill-trained Shi`ite fighters
- have survived largely because of the protection offered by the
- terrain, with its floating reed islands and 20-ft. tall forests
- of papyrus and rushes. But once the swamps are dry, the rebels
- fear not only enemy tanks but also fires, which would push them
- into the arms of troops surrounding the perimeter. In February
- three blazes set by Iraqi barrages scorched several hundred
- square miles of marshland and destroyed dozens of villages.
- </p>
- <p> Government officials insist the Saddam River project, a
- 350-mile canal linking Baghdad with the Shatt al-Arab waterway
- south of Basra, is intended only to add 1.5 million acres to
- Iraq's arable land. Arif al-Delaimi, chief engineer on the proj
- ect, says the southern portion of the canal was completed in
- the 1980s and the marshes have been drying up ever since.
- Instead of driving the inhabitants out, he says, the government
- has been resettling them around artificial lakes. But Andrew
- Whitley, executive director of Middle East Watch says, "The land
- under the water is of little agricultural value. The project
- only makes sense as a political enterprise."
- </p>
- <p> The northern sections of the swamp are already dry. Most
- of the rice farming population has left. In the central
- marshes, the Shi`ite stronghold, the water level has dropped as
- much as 18 ft. Inhabitants now have to dig wells to find
- drinking water; in one attempt, villagers struck oil instead.
- </p>
- <p> Shi`ite rebels in Tehran say the fish, buffalo and rice
- that were the staples of life are gone. They claim the Iraqi
- army is using poison to kill marsh wildlife, and they show
- videotapes of hundreds of fish floating belly up on the brackish
- waters. Emma Nicholson, a British M.P. who has made three trips
- to the marshes, says the inhabitants can no longer sustain
- themselves. In the past eight months, more than 350 villages
- have been destroyed by shell and rocket fire. "The only way to
- live in the marshes today is to remain alone and move every
- day," said a recent escapee.
- </p>
- <p> Rebel leaders say that because of the encirclement, it is
- virtually impossible to get supplies into the swamps or evacuate
- the wounded. Access has been limited to small boats that attempt
- to steal past Iraqi army positions at night. According to a
- report prepared for the European Community, the government
- blockade has brought widespread starvation to the marshes and
- caused commodity prices to rise by "300 times in the past six
- months." The blockade is so effective, says the report, that
- there is not even a black market.
- </p>
- <p> While rebels claim they have been successful in attacking
- the canal's system of levees, dikes and sluice gates, others
- within the Shi`ite community say the system is too vast and too
- easily repaired to be destroyed by the rebels' sporadic attacks.
- One guerrilla leader admitted that a recent raiding party had
- detonated more than 1,000 lbs. of TNT in one of the bigger
- earthworks with little effect. "It just made a small hole that
- released some water," he said, "but it was repaired in two days
- using a diesel shovel."
- </p>
- <p> The marsh fighters have given up hope that the Western
- allies will mount a large-scale rescue. "When we saw the allied
- jets ignore the guns that were killing us and hit only the
- missiles that threatened their planes last year, we knew we had
- been abandoned," said a rebel leader in Tehran.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-