Vol. 27. No. 10
19 May 2005
Diary from Mosul
Patrick Cockburn reports from a divided Iraq
"The sectarian geography of this no man's land between Arabs and Kurds is intricate. Kurdish control peters out in the west and south of the province. Around the town of Hawaijah, a notorious Baathist stronghold to the west, the farmers working in the fields are Arabs. When the US tried to sack Baath Party members here after the invasion, the local hospital almost closed down: all its doctors were members. The headmaster of a secondary school was fired for being a Baathist. His pupils offered to burn down the school in retaliation but he persuaded them not to. The new headmaster, sent from Kirkuk, was too frightened to take up his post. The situation is even more unstable in Mosul, a city of 1.75 million people on the Tigris. Some 70 per cent of its population are Arabs, mostly living on the west bank of the river; the rest are Kurds, who live mostly on the east bank. It's a traditional centre of Arab nationalism and religious fundamentalism. Saadi Pira, until recently the l eader in Mosul of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, claims that 'Mosul was always the true centre of the resistance to the Americans, much more than Fallujah.' The Kurds in Mosul don't even bother to pretend that it is anything other than extremely dangerous." http://www.lrb.co.uk/v27/n10/cock01_.html