By Antonio Castaneda
The Associated Press, 11 July 2006
Clean water should flow to 80 percent of Fallujah's homes this fall, and by summer's end a planned wireless network will provide phone service and Internet access to thousands, a technological leap unimaginable just months ago.
But mounds of rubble litter the city, electricity is available only four hours a day, and an estimated 50,000 people still have not returned 18 months after Fallujah was destroyed in an American assault to wrest control from insurgents.
Progress is mixed in Fallujah, the symbol of anti-American resistance until U.S. troops barreled through the city in November 2004 in the most intense urban combat of the Iraq war.
Improvements have come, but slower than expected and on a smaller scale than planned.
City officials are still asking for more money to pay laborers to haul away seemingly endless piles of rubble. Still, U.S. officials say substantial advancements will become apparent this fall to the residents who have returned.
"By the end of the year, that's when we'll see the turnaround," said Maj. Angel Ortiz of San Pedro, Calif., who oversees projects in the area for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. "After all these years of planning, that's when it's going to pay off in their eyes."
Officials are eagerly looking forward to the completion of a multimillion-dollar water treatment project they say will deliver clean water to 80 percent of Fallujah's homes.
By the end of September, officials say an $8 million wireless telecommunications project could activate 15,000 phone lines in the city. New, modern handsets will then be handed out to families that once had phones lines.
"This phone service will come with Internet. You can stick an ethernet cord in the back of the phone and voila," said Lt. Col. Carl Friedrich of Washington, D.C. If the project works, it could be extended to other cities in western Iraq.
Overall, $192 million has been allocated to more than 100 complete or ongoing projects in the Fallujah area, Ortiz said. An additional $50 million dollars in projects is also expected to be approved.
About 90 percent of projects have experienced delays, Ortiz said.
"The problem with this program is that you don't see progress until they're complete. It's hard for the average citizen to appreciate the programs until they have drinking water, electricity," said Capt. Richard Donnelly of Atlanta, a Marine who helps manage reconstruction projects.
Tens of millions of dollars have also been allocated to projects whose impact won't be immediately obvious. Though over $30 million has been spent on the city's electricity grid, Ortiz said, available wattage may not increase because there aren't enough power plants.
U.S. officials have proposed at least another $30 million to improve the distribution system — but none of it to build more power plants, meaning power levels will remain stagnant.
Other parts of the city's infrastructure have suffered because of power shortages. Many water pumps in the city rely on electricity to disperse water to homes. When a generator at one of the city's largest hospitals recently broke down, engineers complained the entire facility was without power for over a day. Even an infants ward was left in the dark.
"The number one need is electricity. All other projects come after this. The electricity that we have now is not enough," said Najim Abdullah, chairman of the Fallujah City Council.
Though many residents share generators or have bought their own, the cost of fuel has steadily cut into their income.
Residents often complain about compensation payments for damage suffered by homes during the 2004 fighting. Up to 25,000 homes were damaged or destroyed, said Abdullah, and about 70 percent of those payments have been made, he said.
But no money has been forthcoming for high-rise apartments, commercial buildings and industrial facilities, Abdullah said, noting that about half of public buildings such as schools and hospitals are still being repaired.
Reconstruction has also been hampered by Iraq's fractured population. In a meeting with U.S. reconstruction officials, city engineers said the national government was ignoring their requests for help and openly accused Shiite ministers in Baghdad of sidelining Fallujah's Sunni officials.
Progress has also been slowed because remnants of the insurgent force still operate in the city, although at a far lower level than the days when gunmen roamed the streets and insurgent commanders ruled.
Iraqi engineers said insurgents target U.S.-funded projects but have largely spared those funded by the Iraqi government.
"We have had some attacks, but not big attacks. We have good dialogue with (insurgents)," said Khalid al-Jumily, a local engineer who works on several reconstruction projects. "We try to educate them. We say, 'This school is for you.'"
Violence isn't only from insurgents — sometimes it comes from local tribes or organized crime. An attack on workers building a police station left one dead and another seriously wounded. Marines suspected policemen angry about the contractor chosen for the project were responsible.
U.S. commanders also hope other goodwill projects will boost confidence in the new government and U.S reconstruction program. Three new clinics were recently completed, and four new schools that can hold about 1,500 children are due to open this fall.
"The city has progressed a lot, but it's still behind the rest of the world," Abdullah said.
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Citation: Antonio Castaneda. "Clean water, Internet coming to Fallujah," The Associated Press, 11 July 2006.
Original URL: http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060711/ap_on_re_mi_ea/iraq_rebuilding_fallujah_lh1_1
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