http://www.azcentral.com/arizonarepublic/local/articles/1206lopercio06.htmlValley resident describes visit
Chris Fiscus
The Arizona Republic
Dec. 6, 2003 12:00 AM
Last week, his biggest concern was fixing his pool pump. This week he stood atop a roof in Baghdad, talking to The Republic by cellphone.
East Valley restaurateur Mike Lopercio is part of a human rights group delegation to Iraq, grabbing a firsthand look at life after the war. He has serious concerns about the lack of progress with reconstruction and is stunned with the differences between the Iraq seen on the television news and the Iraq he sees by walking the streets. "What you see on the TV doesn't really brace you for what's here," he said in an interview this week. "The town is barricaded up, tanks rolling down the street. Visually, it's arresting. It's shocking."
The trip was arranged through Global Exchange, a human rights group that has openly criticized the Iraq invasion. Lopercio and the delegation have met with more than 15 different groups, from doctors to university and community leaders to schoolchildren, and he calls the trip "truly an unbelievable experience."
Postwar Iraq is the two hospitals he visited that didn't have any drugs, or the schools that don't have lights or heat. Some neighborhoods have trash and sewage in the street. Cars line up for blocks waiting for gas. All the while, Iraqi frustration is high.
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The truth is out there.... And it is slowly finding its way home.