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thedrifter
05-31-03, 06:41 AM
May 30, 2003

‘Martyr’ deemed a hero — and a disgrace

By Scheherezade Faramarzi
Associated Press


ZAQANIYAH, Iraq — There were few tears for Iman Salih Mutlak at her wake. She is a hero to some — a martyr who tried to kill U.S. soldiers with grenades, then died in a hail of their bullets — but her family feels nothing but shame.
Their rage comes not because of her planned attack, but because the 22-year-old woman left the house alone and without permission from her father — thereby besmirching the honor of her tribe.

“When she left the house, she lost her innocence,” said her 71-year-old father, Salih Mutlak. “Had she returned home, I would have killed her myself and drunk her blood.”

The tribal laws that have ruled the villages of Iraq for centuries say a man can take the life of a daughter or sister if he feels she has betrayed the family’s honor. In this deeply conservative culture, Mutlak did just that by going out without permission.

So the family says nothing about how she really died. To hide their shame, they maintain she died during surgery to remove her appendix.

The truth, which they eventually admitted to The Associated Press, is far different.

The coroner who performed Mutlak’s autopsy wrote on her death certificate that she died of gunshot wounds — 10 of them — on May 25.

That day, American soldiers in the town of Baqubah, 12 miles southwest of this village, shot a young woman they said was carrying grenades and trying to approach them.

That woman was Mutlak, who has earned the admiration of many in Baqubah who see the Americans as an unwelcome occupation force.

But what exactly happened is still blurry. Why would Mutlak, a peasant with little education who was never permitted to leave home alone, attack the soldiers? She was not involved in politics, and there is no evidence she was recruited by militants.

Capt. Josh Felker, public affairs officer for the division’s 2nd Brigade, says Mutlak approached a U.S. checkpoint with grenades in her hands and wrapped around her waist.

As she walked forward, U.S. soldiers told her to stop, motioning for her to hit the ground. When she continued, they fired a warning shot and yelled for her to stop.

Soldiers heard something like a “rock hitting the ground and then an explosion,” Felker said — apparently a grenade going off.

The soldiers opened fire, but she still didn’t stop. “She was limping or crawling, but was still coming at them,” Felker said. “Within our rules of engagement, we defended ourselves and took appropriate measures.”

Some Iraqi witnesses in a nearby office said they heard no explosion.

They say the soldiers called for the woman to stop as she walked toward them, and when she kept walking they shot her. They said Mutlak was not carrying grenades — though they offered no evidence — and say the Americans claimed that to justify their act.

To some in Baqubah, Mutlak is a martyr — a hero in their struggle against the Americans. Since Saddam Hussein’s ouster, U.S. soldiers have repeatedly come under attack in Iraq. Just this week, at least nine Americans died, five of them in attacks or ambushes, and two dozen were wounded.

“Anyone who resists the occupation is a hero,” said 60-year-old Abdel-Latif, who did not want to give his last name.

“To us, any foreigner who comes here is an occupier, not a liberator,” said Mohammed al-Ahmad. “We don’t want them to liberate us. They have come to take our oil.”

American soldiers disagree. But even Felker acknowledged the situation could be seen from different angles.

“She was doing what she believed in. In my view, she was wrong,” he said. But he acknowledged that Mutlak was “just like me — I’m willing to die for what I’m doing here.”

The family is worried about retribution. “We are afraid of the Americans,” her father said. “We are afraid they would kill us.”

Her older sister, Salwa, said Mutlak was an unhappy loner with no friends, and possibly mentally disturbed. “If she had brains, she wouldn’t have attacked a tank,” said Salwa Mutlak, 30, who exhibited a cold sadness at losing her sister.

The sisters shared a room where they prayed, read the Koran and watched television. The younger sister liked sad Egyptian movies.

Salwa Mutlak said that on Sunday, when she and her mother awakened from an afternoon nap, her sister was nowhere to be seen.

“It was the first time she had left the house on her own,” said Salwa.

But how did the young woman arrive at a U.S. Army position in Baqubah? If she was carrying grenades, how did she get them? Was someone else behind the attack? Was she duped?

The only clue is the brief note she wrote her parents. Written in pencil in a child’s handwriting and in poor Arabic, it gives few answers.

“Dear father, dear mother,

“I am going to carry out a martyrdom operation for the sake of God and for Islam and Muslims.

“Your sincere daughter, Iman.”






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Copyright 2003 The Associated Press.



Sempers,

Roger