BAGHDAD: Iraq on Tuesday quietly marked a decade since US-led forces took control of Baghdad, sealing the ouster of Saddam Hussein’s brutal regime, but the country remains plagued by attacks and mired in crises.

Remembered the world over for the iconic images of Iraqis pulling down a statue of Saddam in central Baghdad’s Firdos Square—helped in no small part by an American military unit—the fall of the capital is a far more emotive day in Iraq than the anniversary of the invasion itself weeks earlier.

The day the statue fell on April 9, 2003, Saddam’s vaunted army had largely melted away, and was seen as defeated and demoralised.

But the sense of elation felt by many Iraqis that day, at seeing a dictator who had ruled for more than two decades fall, was matched by a feeling of bitterness among others who felt their country had been occupied by a foreign power.

Those divisions in how April 9 is seen within Iraq have spurred the government to eschew any formal commemorations, and unlike in previous years, only the autonomous northern Kurdistan region is marking the occasion with a public holiday, rather than the entire country.

“Despite all the problems of the past decade, the overwhelming majority of Iraqis agree that we’re better off today than under Hussein’s brutal dictatorship,” Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki wrote in the Washington Post.

“Iraqis will remain grateful for the US role and for the losses sustained by military and civilian personnel that contributed in ending Hussein’s rule.

These losses pale by comparison, of course, to those sustained by the Iraqi people.” Illustrating the sharp divide over the significance of the anniversary, some Iraqis at Tahrir Square in central Baghdad viewed it as a bad memory.

“It was a dark and a sad day,” said Mohammed al-Qaisi, who runs a photography shop. “It’s impossible for anyone to be happy about the occupation of his country.” “All the corruption and the problems, they all happened after the occupation, after April 9.”Wathiq Ahmed, whose shop specialises in creating store banners, agreed, telling AFP: “We were happy to change the former regime, but what we saw afterwards was so awful that we wished that the old regime had stayed and that we remained in our old situation.”

“Safety, not money, not services, is the most important thing in life.” Though the war itself was relatively brief — six weeks after foreign troops invaded, then US president George W. Bush infamously declared the mission accomplished — its aftermath was bloody and fractious.

Caught between Shia militia groups and Sunni insurgents, US and coalition forces paid a heavy price: some 4,800 foreign troops died in Iraq, more than 90 percent of them American.

Britain-based organisation Iraq Body Count recently estimated at least 112,000 Iraqi civilians died in the decade after the invasion, while thousands of soldiers and policemen were also killed. And along with the still-present violence, the country continues to suffer from near-constant political crises typically attributed to a stalled reconciliation process.

Ministers appeared to take a key step in that process this month, however, by unveiling sweeping reforms of laws barring those with links to Saddam’s regime from participating in public life.

The draft amendments to the De-Baathification law, however, are likely to face strong opposition in parliament, which needs to approve the proposals.—AFP

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