Maintenant c’est sûr, l’Irak est une démocratie

Ouverture libre

   Forum

Il n'y a pas de commentaires associés a cet article. Vous pouvez réagir.

   Imprimer

 825

Maintenant c’est sûr, l’Irak est une démocratie

Ils avaient tous raison, Tony Blair d’écrire ses mémoires pour nous l’affirmer, BHO pour nous dire que la page est tournée et qu’elle est démocratique, comme GW Bush l’annonçait il y a sept ans (“Mission accomplished”, et bien remplie), comme le commente notre grotesque ambassadeur-de-France (il faut le préciser) à Bagdad : «…le vrai laboratoire de la démocratie dans le monde arabe [...] un modèle politique pour ses voisins.»

En effet, nous dit AFP, relayée par Spacewar.com ce 8 septembre 2010, en effet on y rackette, on y rançonne, on y extorque des fonds, exactement comme dans le Chicago de 1930, là où régnait le sacré Albert “Al” Capone, – et peut-on rêver référence plus démocratique que l’Amérique de 1930? Il paraît, en plus, que c’est al Qaïda qui veut ranimer ses comptes bancaires défaillants, se refaire une santé. (Tiens, on croyait qu’al Qaïda n’était plus en Irak ? Non, d’ailleurs, ce n’est pas al Qaïda mais ISI, ou Islamic State of Irak, et la référence n’est pas Capone mais The Godfather…)

«Al-Qaeda has increasingly turned to extortion and organised crime to fund its activities, with businesses bearing the brunt of intimidation, US and Iraqi commanders in northern Iraq told AFP.

»While the number of attacks in Mosul and the surrounding province of Nineveh has dropped and the smuggling of weapons across Iraq's western border with Syria has declined, threats and coercion targeting locals remains commonplace.

»“Everyone pays, and no one objects or delays because their vehicles will be seized and their shops closed, until they pay up,” said Abdullah Ahmed Ali, who owns a market stall in the Prophet Younis neighbourhood of central Mosul. Trucks carrying food from Syria or Baghdad are levied a 200-dollar charge, while smaller vehicles incur a 100-dollar fee. Outright refusal is not an option, the 44-year-old Ali said.

»“Those who refuse to pay,” he added, “end up like Abu Mohammed” a fellow shopkeeper who, according to Ali, reputedly declined to hand over money to the Islamic State of Iraq (ISI), Al-Qaeda's front group. Abu Mohammed was shot dead, and his son was injured, six months ago.

»Tales of similar intimidation abound in Mosul – which translates loosely as “the junction” in Arabic, and for centuries has been a Middle East trading hub.

»The city, however, is now better known as a centre for the smuggling of illicit goods from Syria – mostly innocuous items such as cigarettes, but also occasionally weapons.

»Captain Keith Benoit, commander of the 3rd Squadron, 7th Cavalry Regiment's Apache Troop, which jointly patrols much of western Nineveh with Iraqi army and Kurdish Peshmerga soldiers, said there were “weapons facilitation” problems. “You also see extortion – they have resorted to that because flows of military-grade explosives and weapons have been closed off,” he said.

»Benoit compared organised crime in Nineveh to a well-known scene in the 1972 film “The Godfather.” “It's like the horse's head in the bed,” Benoit said, while on a joint patrol of the village of Ayn-Zalah north of Mosul. “They'll threaten you – ‘cooperate with us, or we'll kill you’.”»

dedefensa.org