U.S. Shuts Down Weekly Newspaper In Iraq
Non-Violent Protest Claims Closure Hinders Free Expression
Hours after the closure of Al-Hawza, more than 1,000 supporters
of cleric Muqtada al-Sadr demonstrated peacefully in front of the
newspaper's offices, decrying what they called a crackdown on
freedom of expression.
Dozens of U.S. soldiers arrived at the Al-Hawza newspaper
offices Sunday morning and closed its doors with chains and locks,
sheik Abdel-Hadi Darraja said in front of the one-story house.
Darraja is a representative of al-Sadr, who lives in the
southern holy city of Najaf and has been an outspoken critic of the
U.S.-led occupation, but has not called for armed attacks.
A coalition letter in Arabic, signed by top U.S. administrator
L. Paul Bremer and handed to employees at the newspaper, said the
paper's articles "form a serious threat of violence against
coalition forces and Iraqi citizens who cooperate with coalition
authorities in rebuilding Iraq."
The paper will close for 60 days, the statement said.
A coalition spokesman confirmed the 60-day closure, saying
several articles "were designed to incite violence against
coalition forces and incite instability" in Iraq.
The spokesman, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said any
violation of the closure could lead to the imprisonment of
newspaper employees for up to one year and a fine of up to $1,000.
Dan Senor, senior adviser to U.S. civil administrator Paul Bremer, said the newspaper was presenting grossly incorrect information encouraging Iraqis to direct their anger and violence toward U.S. coalition troops. He said they shut it down because the people at the paper are trying to provoke murders against the coalition and against Iraqi people.
On Feb. 26, an article in Al-Hawza claimed that a suicide
bombing two weeks earlier that targeted the mostly Shiite town of
Iskandariyah, south of Baghdad, was a rocket "fired by an
(American) Apache helicopter and not a car bomb." The attack
killed 53 people.
In the same edition an article was titled "Bremer follows the
steps of Saddam," and criticized coalition work in Iraq.
"This is what happens when an Iraqi journalist expresses his
opinion," said the white-turbaned Darraja.
"What is happening now is what used to happen during the days
of Saddam. No freedom of opinion. It is like the days of the
Baath," said Hussam Abdel-Kadhim, 25, a vendor who took part in
the demonstration, referring to the Baath Party that ruled Iraq for
35 years until Saddam Hussein was ousted a year ago.
In July, the coalition announced the closure of a Baghdad
newspaper and the arrest of its office manager. The statement said
Al-Mustaqila, which means "The Independent" in Arabic, published
an article on July 13 calling for "death to all spies and those
who cooperate with the U.S." It said killing them was a religious
duty.
Distributed by Internet Broadcasting Systems, Inc. The Associated Press contributed to this report. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.






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