SPACE WIRE
Iraqis answer US call to restore order and services in Baghdad
BAGHDAD (AFP) Apr 12, 2003
Hundreds of Iraqis, including police officers, turned up Saturday in response to a US appeal to help restore order and services after weeks of heavy bombardment were followed by an orgy of looting, AFP reporters said.

They converged on the Palestine Hotel where US officers and journalists are housed after foreign radio stations broadcast a call for qualified people to come forward.

Among them were a first group of seven Iraqi police officers led by a colonel.

Colonel Ahmad Abdelrazzak Said wore his uniform and was accompanied by six other officers in civilian dress.

US Marines searched him at the entrance where he told reporters he had come with colleagues to help end the looting which has plagued Baghdad since US forces took control of the capital on Wednesday.

Public services, in particular water and electricity, have been out for many days.

Other Iraqis also converged on the city centre hotel requesting to be able to use journalists' satellite phones to call their relatives abroad after the collapse of communications facilities.

Telephone exchanges were among the targets of US-Brtish bombers which began blasting away at the infrastructure on March 20.

The rush outside the hotel caused the first traffic jam in three weeks amid a din of honking car horns on al-Fardus square, adding an air of normal times to the capital which plunged into anarchy after the collapse of Saddam Hussein's regime.

Traffic appeared to be returning across the city, but any flow was slowed by checkpoints set up by US forces up and also the curiosity of drivers who like to inspect the troops in full combat gear beside their armoured vehicles.

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