
United States troops patrol on a street in Baghdad, Iraq, June 29, 2004. The US transferred political authority to the Iraqi interim government on June 28, but the US force continued patrol in Baghdad June 29. (Xinhua photo)

A US soldier patrols on a street in Baghdad, Iraq, June 29, 2004. The US transferred political authority to the Iraqi interim government on June 28, but the US force continued patrol in Baghdad June 29. (Xinhua photo)

A United States military vehicle patrols on a street in Baghdad, Iraq, June 29, 2004. The US transferred political authority to the Iraqi interim government on June 28, but the US force continued patrol in Baghdad June 29. (Xinhua photo)

US soldiers stand guard at the site where a vehicle carries suspicious explosives in a residential area in Baghdad, Iraq, June 29, 2004. The US transferred political authority to the Iraqi interim government on June 28, but the US force continued patrol in Baghdad June 29. (Xinhua photo)

US soldiers prepare to remove suspicious explosives in a residential area in Bagdad, Iraq, June 29, 2004. The US transferred political authority to the Iraqi interim government on June 28, but the US force continued patrol in Baghdad June 29. (Xinhua photo)

An Iraqi boy reads newspaper in Baghdad June 29, 2004. Paul Bremer (R) and Prime Minister of Iraq Interim Government Ayad Alawi appear on the paper. (Xinhua Photo)
By Shaalan Ahmed, Laith
Salman
BAGHDAD, June 29 (Xinhuanet) -- The Iraqi capital
Baghdad seemed calm and natural as no signs of celebrations or decorations were
seen Tuesday, one day after the coalition gave power to the Iraqi interim
government.
Hayder Fadhil Abbass, a member
of the Iraqi civil defense force that was formed by the US-led coalition last
year, was carrying his weapon and guarding one of the gates leading to the Green
Zone. Nothing had changed for him after the power handover.
"Nothing had changed and I didn't see any difference between yesterday and
today, for I'm guarding this position, which is taken by the American forces as
a headquarters and I receive orders from the American soldiers," said
Abbass.
The streets of Baghdad did not seem more crowded
compared with the past days, and the Iraqi police were maintaining checkpoints
and practicing their duty in a way that brought joy and happiness to
Iraqis.
"I feel today that I'm the master of the street and
that I have the power to apply the law and punish violators," said Sabir
Attya, a police officer.
"The policemen now feel their value
as they are working alone and independent from the American forces," he said.
"This makes them safer than before because the national resistance would not
attack the Iraqi police knowing that they are trying to impose security and
preserve the citizens from looters and criminals."
Sergeant
Basim Sarhan, a traffic policeman in Al Allawy district, was organizing traffic
with a smile on his face.
When asked about the reason behind
this smile, he said, "How could I not smile now that I feel I'm valuable as a
law man and can apply the law, protect people."
"Today I
feel I'm free in my decision and no one controls my destiny," he
added.
Hussein Al Zubaidy, a 52-year-old newspaper seller in
the street, had an impression that was different from that of the traffic
policeman standing near him.
The only thing that changed was
that the Iraqi flag was raised on the building of the Palace of Conference,
Zubaidy said.
He said that he hoped the new Iraqi government
would achieve the Iraqis' wish that security and order are imposed after the
power handover.
At Al Firdoos Square, where the American
forces pulled down the statue of former Iraqi president Saddam Hussein last
year, barb wires and cement barriers were removed and people could now pass
around it after it was closed for many months.
However, the
square seemed empty except for five cleaning workers, who said they were happy
for the power handover and the lifting of the barriers.
A
40-year-old lady said she was happy that Paul Bremer, the American civil
administrator in Iraq, left Iraq Monday immediately after he handed the power
over to the interim Iraqi government.
But she said that the
power was handed over to a government appointed by the Americans and, in fact,
to John Negroponte, the new US ambassador to Iraq who arrived in the country a
few hours after Bremer had left.
Sheikh Omar Mohamed Al
Nu'amy, imam and preacher of the 14 Ramadan Mosque in front of Al Firdoos
Square, was carrying three rifles into the mosque.
Saying he
brought the weapons to protect the mosque against any attack, Nu'amy noted that
he did not see any change by the power handover.
US
airplanes and patrols were still roaming around and causing all types of trouble
in the Iraqi streets, he said.
In Adhamiyah, northern
Baghdad, residents said masked attackers clashed with American forces and Iraqi
police early Tuesday morning.
An Iraqi lady, who preferred
not to be mentioned by name, said some armed men attacked the police station in
Al Adhamiyah in the morning.
Armed men also attacked some former residential palaces, which the American forces have taken as headquarters, with mortar rounds,she said. Enditem |