Vital Signs of a Ruined Falluja Grow Stronger
…”Falluja is safe,” said Hadima Khalifa Abed, 42, who returned to her ruined home in January with her husband and 10 children. “But it is safe like a prison.”
American military officials here say they face a difficult choice. Easing the harsh security measures might help revive the economy and cut the 50 percent unemployment rate; it could also allow the return of the insurgents who ran Falluja from last April until the American intervention in November. Even now, insurgents lob occasional mortar shells into the city, and a number of contractors have been killed here.
There are other obstacles. Falluja still lacks a mayor and a city council because of the new Iraqi National Assembly’s failure to form a government. The American military is reluctant to make decisions that will shape the city for decades, and the resulting power vacuum has been crippling.
Hundreds of new police officers, trained in Jordan, are expected to arrive in the city soon, American military officials say. Nongovernmental organizations have donated truckloads of equipment for fire stations, hospitals and schools. But there are no police stations for the officers to work in, and there are no new fire stations because no one has the authority to decide where to build them.
Full Article: nytimes.com
The optimistic headline and pics accompanying this article contrast starkly with its content. Most people just skim headlines and captions anyway.