US closes Iraqi newspaper -- Freedom of Speech not included in 'Operation Iraqi Freedom?'

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hangin' about
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Sunday, March 28, 2004 Posted: 3:15 PM EST (2015 GMT)

Iraqis demonstrate in Baghdad against the closure of Al Hawsa newspaper.

BAGHDAD, Iraq (CNN) -- Several thousand Iraqis protested the closure of a newspaper Sunday, chanting anti-U.S. slogans and burning American flags outside the newspaper's office in Baghdad.

The U.S.-led civil administration in Iraq closed the Baghdad newspaper Al Hawsa for 60 days, accusing its publishers of inciting violence against coalition troops.

The paper is published by followers of prominent Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr.

"If the Coalition forces are going to keep on presenting us with such messages... they can just dream about any sort of end to terrorism," a statement from the newspaper said. "And they can also dream that we will stay quiet and step down from what we believe."

The Coalition Provisional Authority accused the paper's editors of printing articles that incited violence against U.S. and other coalition troops -- a violation of coalition regulations.

The building was sealed, and anyone caught attempting to publish the paper could face up to a year in jail and a $1,000 fine.

Sadr is the son of Shiite imam Muhammad Baqr al-Sadr, a prominent leader assassinated in 1999. A vocal critic of the American occupation of Iraq, he has a substantial following in the Shiite district of Baghdad that now bears his father's name.

In July, Iraqi police closed a newspaper they accused of running a "clearly inciteful" article calling on Iraqis to kill "all spies and those who cooperate with the U.S."

Baghdad blast wounds 4

Four Iraqi civilians were wounded Sunday, two seriously, in an explosion in the Baghdad neighborhood of Al-Karkh, said Brig. Ali Khazaal, an Iraqi police spokesman.

The blast appeared to have been the result of a buried improvised bomb, he said.

"There were four people injured in this attack, and they were rushed over to the hospital," he Khazaal said. "Two people were lightly injured and two people were severely injured. All of them are being treated."

The names of those injured were not known.

In the northern Iraqi city of Mosul Sunday, two civilians -- one British, one Canadian -- were killed in an attack.

The foreign ministries of each country confirmed the deaths, but said no details had been released.

A U.S. military spokesman in Iraq could only confirm "an incident that is being investigated by coalition forces and Iraqi police."

A military spokesman in Iraq could only confirm "an incident that is being investigated by coalition forces and Iraqi police" in Mosul.

A convoy carrying an Iraqi cabinet minister came under attack Sunday in northern Iraq, a coalition spokeswoman and a Kurdish official told CNN.

Nisreen Berwari, Iraq's minister of municipalities and public works, survived unscathed, but her driver and a bodyguard were killed, said coalition spokeswoman Kristi Clemens. Two others were wounded, Clemens said.

Qubad Talibani, a Kurdish official and son of an Iraqi Governing Council member, said the attack was an assassination attempt, but Clemens said it was not known whether Berwari was specifically targeted.

CNN's Vivian Paulsen, Eden Pontz and Kianne Sadeq contributed to this report.

http://www.cnn.com/2004/WORLD/meast...main/index.html
 

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<BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><font size="-1">quote:</font><HR>
The building was sealed, and anyone caught attempting to publish the paper could face up to a year in jail and a $1,000 fine.
<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>

That's been the law there for quite some time now. True, it restricts freedom, but it's like, you know, protecting them (the US occupiers) from terrorists. Except for the hundreds dead from terror attacks. But nearly everybody else who has not been killed by terrorist attacks, and I think I should not have to point out that there are millions of Iraqis and billions of people worldwide who have not yet been killed in terrorist attacks, and really if you think about it can you definitively say those people would still be alive if it were legal to print anti-CPA, anti-freedom, anti-anti-terrorism radical ethnic Muslim propoganda in Iraq?

Do you really want to take that sort of chance with millions, if not billions, of lives at stake? Think of the children, woman! The children of Iraq, and in another, better-nourished and less brown way, the children of America. It's for the children.

/me waves little flag.

</sarcasm>

Phaedrus
 

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Yes, but I thought that the Iraq war has significantly reduced the threat of terrorism, given the strong ties and all ... and (I remember how cute he looked when he said this) Bush told us all: 'I think we're welcomed in Iraq.' The Iraqi people, who love and adore the US military, must be equally outraged at such horrific story-telling that the laws of supply and demand will dictate the eventual shutting down of this paper anyway. "We've only sped that up -- brought the Iraqis what they want. We're good at that."

Yeah.
 

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The Muslims calling Iraq their country want the US there, and yet don't want us there. That's about all there is to it.

These proud people are probably suffering from MPD(multiple personality disorder). I would think you bleeding hearts would be assuring them that things will be better post Saddam rather than blasting our administration for its policies for its every move over there.
 

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Uh yeh.
The Vietnamese suffered from that problem too.

Darn foreigners, they just don't realise we're only there to help them!

It was damn cheeky of them to want a destiny that we disagreed with.

I just don't know.
When will these foreign peckerheads get with the program.

We'll just have to give them a sound thrashing.

tally ho chaps.
 

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