Iraq war, violence, the nausea, war, terrorism, wold war

He isn't
a criminal, but just the sight of a police officer terrifies 14-year-old Omar.
The boy was released last month from an Iraqi prison, after being detained there
for more than seven months. "They arrested me because they said I was a suspect
after a car bomb exploded in a road near my home and resulted in the killing of
an American," Omar explains. He happened to be near the explosion and was
arrested along with adult Iraqis suspected of the attack. Omar was one of 450
detainees who were let out of the two Iraqi and US-run prisons on 27 June, under
a national reconciliation plan aimed at bringing insurgents into the political
process and ending the bloodshed in Iraq. Although Omar was falsely arrested,
dozens of other children have been imprisoned for their roles in attacks, or
because poverty turned them to crime, according to reports from local and
international groups and the news media in the past three years. Omar said the
experience of being in prison was terrifying, "and I was crying day and night
for my family." The trauma of the experience remains with him: "I would rather
die than go there again"...