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    Hawr Rajab City Council meets 2nd BCT ePRT

    Hawr Rajab City Council meets 2nd BCT ePRT

    Photo By Sgt. Kevin Stabinsky | Mr. John Smith, team leader, 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 3rd Infantry Division, out of...... read more read more

    Sgt. Kevin Stabinsky
    2nd Brigade Combat Team, 3rd Infantry Division

    FORWARD OPERATING BASE KALSU, Iraq – "We need you and your wisdom. You know how businesses work. You know what your family needs," the 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 3rd Infantry Division, embedded Provincial Reconstruction Team leader told the sheiks of the Hawr Rajab City Council. "We need you to teach us ways to do it so we can help."

    John Smith, the ePRT leader, and coalition forces met with the sheiks in Hawr Rajab, Oct. 31, to discuss the changes taking place there.

    Such cooperation is vital, Smith said, because success depends on all parties banding together and sharing knowledge.

    Working together with the council, Smith and Ferrell said new businesses can grow, revitalizing the local economy.

    Smith, himself a small farm owner, said his heart is with the farmers and he will work to support the people of Hawr Rajab.

    Several projects targeting the main needs of the community, roads, water and electricity are already underway. Road repairs, bridge construction, and water and sewer pipe repair are providing jobs for many of the locals.

    Lt. Col. David Kennedy, commander, 2nd Brigade, 3rd Troops Battalion, 2nd BCT, 3rd Inf. Div., and ePRT deputy team leader, also said that electrical projects are also being conducted in the area.

    According to Kennedy, 2500 meters of electrical distribution lines will be laid, three ground transformers will be repaired, 140 street lights will be replaced, and 30 solar power lights will be installed.

    "It will make the area safer, a more secure environment for people to move at night and feel safe," he explained.

    Although some contractors hired to perform these jobs are from out of the area, 90 percent of the workers are local hires, Kennedy said.

    The next step for expanding security provided by the concerned citizens was also discussed at the meeting.

    Sheik Mahir al-Muini and Brig. Gen. Ahmed Al-Dulaymi, concerned local citizens commander, asked Ferrell for assistance in creating better communication between the concerned citizens and their Iraqi army allies.

    The two also asked to have the concerned citizens training program moved into Hawr Rajab so that more citizens can be trained. Currently, the training is conducted at Forward Operating Base Falcon, which they said causes problems for volunteers without transportation.

    The requests come at a vital time, as security operations are currently being planned into adjacent neighborhoods such as Adwaniyah, where insurgents have fled due to improved security in Hawr Rajab.

    While Ferrell was pleased at the progress made by the concerned citizens in securing their neighborhoods, he cautioned them about moving too fast.

    "We can't overstretch, gain too many places too fast. We need to make sure an area is strong before we go to a new area," he said.

    Ferrell explained it is important to maintain a presence, shifting forces to areas of threat, rather than shifting all assets into a new area.

    "We need to maintain a presence. We have security and we need to take advantage of what we have before we move forward again," Ferrell said.

    As security continues to improve, Ferrell added, more energy and resources can be allocated to Smith's work. In the meantime, Smith said the initial phases of reconstruction can begin.

    "Now it is time to get the people back and stores open so families can go on living their day-to-day lives," Ferrell said. "Let's show the people who live here, and want to live here, that we can make progress."

    The next step in creating that progress is to help empower the council and get them to work and communicate with the directors in the Iraqi central government.

    "It is not about us, it is about the Iraqi government," Kennedy said. "We need to convince the Iraqi government to work for them."

    Some progress has been made on this end, Kennedy said, noting that many of the electricity based projects are being coordinated through the Rashid department of electricity.

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 11.05.2007
    Date Posted: 11.05.2007 13:55
    Story ID: 13647
    Location: ISKANDARIYAH, IQ

    Web Views: 66
    Downloads: 46

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