NationStates Jolt Archive


Something you won't see in the news: New Iraqi city

[NS]Canada City
23-08-2005, 15:39
08.19.2005 at 03:47pm
Sgt. Jennifer J. Eidson
22nd Mobile Public Affairs Detachment


FORWARD OPERATING BASE NORMANDY, Iraq – Coalition Soldiers are working to help Iraqis rebuild their country through rebuilding schools and forming a democratic government in Iraq.

However, some 1st Battalion, 30th Infantry Regiment Soldiers took it a step farther by helping locals turn their village into a town and elect the first-ever mayor of Hamrin, Iraq on July 20.

Khalid Ibrahim Khalif Aljaboori, Hamrin’s new mayor, said he knows he has been given an important position and is honored by the election results.

“I feel very good and I hope to make everything safe for the people of this town,” Khalif said. “I know this is a very hard mission, a hard job. I realize I represent the people here and they will help me with this mission.”

Captain Mark Stoneman, native of High Point, N.C., and battery commander of Battery B, 1st Battalion, 10th Field Artillery Regiment, Task Force Liberty, said supporting the town of Hamrin with the reconstruction and development process is part of his unit’s mission and they want to make sure the people are being provided with the necessary services.

“The town of Hamrin has never had a mayor or any kind of elected official in its history and consequently they were getting left behind their neighbors in terms of development projects and basically just the reconstruction of the country and the democratic process,” Stoneman said. “We suggested to them that it might be a good idea for them to elect a mayor, an elected official to represent the whole town.”

Stoneman said the locals embraced the idea and began work to elect a mayor.
“They organized an election themselves and they asked us to observe that election to make sure it was fair and equitable,” he said. “Basically, we just sat in the back and let them run with it and provided advice and assistants when they needed it.”
Khalif said he despite not being at the same level as the surrounding town he still wants to work to better Hamrin.

“We try to make it more beautiful and a city with more services than towns around,” Khalif said.

The Coalition Soldiers are working on projects that will do just that for the town, said Stoneman.

“We’ve sponsored a project to run water to every house in town and that project is pending approval at this time,” he said. “We are also trying to rebuild some schools.

There has been basically no money put in the town for about 15 years so schools are run down. Large parts of them are unusable so we’re trying to fix that for them.”

Khalif said local leaders talked to the government before about these problems, but would not receive any help. He said now the people of the town know that Stoneman and his Soldiers are here to help and are grateful for it.
“(Stoneman) feels about the people here and helped us to make this town,” Khalif said. “He listens when the people here talk and he does what they want.”

The Soldiers have other projects in the town that are waiting to be approved, and Stoneman said they are doing little things that will improve the town and relationships between Coalition Soldiers and the citizens of Hamrin.

“The smaller projects that we’ve been able to do, for example we were able to build a soccer field fairly cheaply and quickly, had an effect on the children in the town, because it gave them somewhere to play year-round,” Stoneman said. “It’s the same with rebuilding a school or running water pipes to everybody’s house. If we are able to achieve that where Saddam Hussein’s administration failed I think it would go a long way to giving them confidence in their new government and in us.”

Khalif said he believes that when Coalition Soldiers leave the people of Hamrin will be able to continue keeping the town a safe and beautiful place to live, but for now they still need some help.

“We have the authority to do that,” Khalif said. “We just need the support.”
Stoneman agreed.

“I think they have already demonstrated that they are able to take over for themselves,” he said. “They ran this election themselves; maybe 50 local Iraqi citizens organized and executed the elections. They ran the national elections in January and they maintain their own security pretty well.

“It is a fairly safe area,” Stoneman said. “I am pretty confident that once we leave Hamrin will be able sustain itself as a safe a stable place to live.”


And naysayers keep piping up about how Iraqis just aren't able to grasp the concept of democratic forms of government!
Ph33rdom
23-08-2005, 15:47
Canada City']And naysayers keep piping up about how Iraqis just aren't able to grasp the concept of democratic forms of government!

The naysayers (as you called them) that say the Iraqi's aren't 'qualified' or good enough to have their own democracy are just bigots. They deny it of course, but they think the Arabs and Kurds in Iraq aren't 'smart' enough or something. Pure racism.
Sheer Stupidity
23-08-2005, 15:50
I dated an Iraqi girl in high school. She was pretty smart. Very pretty too. :cool:
Enethie
23-08-2005, 15:52
Canada City']And naysayers keep piping up about how Iraqis just aren't able to grasp the concept of democratic forms of government!

A lot of them do. It's just that the ones who don't happen to be armed.

http://photos1.blogger.com/blogger/6272/487/400/coffin.jpg
Zizzopia
23-08-2005, 16:01
aww! thats so special! good job iraqi town!!

i still think that as a whole, we should have just let them do their thing. but hey, they seem to like it, or so the article implies. hopefully thats true.

jen
Demented Hamsters
23-08-2005, 16:11
Canada City']And naysayers keep piping up about how Iraqis just aren't able to grasp the concept of democratic forms of government!
Not quite. I think you'll find (if you read their posts) that the naysayers generally have been saying that Iraq's infrastructure (or complete lack thereof) and insurgency problems are why government control is not going to work very well in the short-to-medium term.

This article pretty much proves that point. The US army had to rebuild the town's infrastructure and maintain order before democratic elections could be held.
--America
23-08-2005, 16:16
Pesona;;y I think that we can let Iraq do it's thing now. We just don't want it to end up like another Haiti.
Adlersburg-Niddaigle
23-08-2005, 16:46
Your point is well taken and it is a much sought hope that Iraq will one day become a decent place for people to raise families. After all, Iraq was once the center of a flourishing Islamic culture and may once again form the nucleus of a renaissance in Arab lands (inch'Allah). But that is hope.

The reality is that the régime of Saddam Hussein and the Bush war have plunged a once relatively prosperous country into a state of poverty and turmoil. It will take barrels of money to rebuild a destroyed infrastructure (hospitals, schools, universities, water and electricity services, etc.). But the USA where it is estimated that some 70% of innercity families live below the indefensibly low poverty index is hardly able to devote additional billions to Iraq. Perhaps Iraqi oil may fund the rebuilding once it becomes the property of the Iraqi people but, judging from the availability and price of that oil in Iraq itself, I would venture that someone other than the Iraqis is benefitting from it.

And once the USA leaves Iraq (whenever that may be), it is far more likely that the country will fall apart into its constituent elements: Sunni Kurds, Sunni Arabs, and Shi'ite Arabs. The terrorist attacks we now witness are merely the hors d'oeuvre to a vicious civil war. In destabilising Iraq and the whole of western Asia, we may thank Mr Bush and his régime. If such farsighted foreign policies continue, the peoples of that region may look forward to many years of civil strife.
[NS]Canada City
23-08-2005, 21:05
This article pretty much proves that point. The US army had to rebuild the town's infrastructure and maintain order before democratic elections could be held.

You know it's a village of 50 people that never tried the whole 'democracy' thing before, right?

Yeesh, liberals :headbang:
[NS]Canada City
24-08-2005, 00:27
Kind of like the media, when something good happens in Iraq, it gets ignored.