Transformer: Workers installed a transformer in Saidiyah last week. For more than a year, part of the area has not been connected to Baghdad's power grid.
Howard Lafranchi
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Iraq's new gated communities: safer, mixed, walled-in

Residents are moving back to Saidiyah, a neighborhood once racked by sectarian violence that is now guarded by a 12-foot-high wall.

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Reporter Howard LaFranchi discusses the practice of wall-building to quell violence in Iraq.

"You can't say there's perfect safety here now, but it's much better than before when you didn't dare go out on the street," says Ali Latif, a young Shiite who returned to Saidiyah in January after leaving for six months. "There are still terrorists here, but now they stay more hidden," adds the unemployed security guard, who says his job now is "bodyguard for my mom when she wants to go to the market."

It is also clear that the US military still holds sway over Saidiyah – and that is causing tensions with local authorities who say it's time the Americans left more responsibility to the Iraqis.

At the Support Council, Amari complains that the Americans intervened to stop a decision to evict families that the council determined had moved in to take advantage of Saidiyah's turmoil. "These are families that moved here from [Sunni neighborhoods] simply to get a better house, and we decided they should be moved back. But the Americans stopped us from carrying this out," he adds.

"The Americans say they are here as friends and not occupiers, and the United Nations has said Iraq is again a sovereign nation," Amari says, "but sometimes the reality on the ground suggests something different."

And at Saidiyah's Iraqi Army base, an intelligence officer says the six suspects arrested when the weapons cache was found were taken away by the US military, when local residents wanted them tried locally. "They said the explosive vests made them of interest to the American higher-ups," says the officer, whose line of work prevented him from giving his name. "But we do have an Iraqi justice system, you know, and there are families here who would have claims against those criminals."

Some locals were also critical of the US military for initially creating a Sahwa patrol that was all Sunni, when other new groups like the Support Council are making efforts to reduce the sectarian divide. The local Sahwa is now mixed and funded by the Iraqis, though smaller than when under American direction.

Major Saad Abbas, who commands Iraqi operations in Saidiyah, lauds the "cooperative relationship" he has with his American counterparts. He is particularly proud of how the two forces worked together to sweep Saidiyah "from top to bottom" to make it the safer neighborhood it has become.

But he says the US role is increasingly one of backup and oversight, and he can foresee the day when their presence will no longer be necessary. "If they left today," he says, "we're ready to control Saidiyah."

Not everyone agrees. Back on al-Marifah Street, grocery merchant Ibrahim says the people – and the Iraqi Army – are not ready for the Americans to go.

"The Americans are testing the Iraqi troops, and our sense of security is still very new so the people would be very nervous if the Americans left," he says. "No, their presence is still 100 percent necessary."

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