] The way people were grabbing at the man walking along ] Paradise Square here, he may as well have been giving ] away bottled water or satellite telephones or chunks of ] gold, people were so aggressive. But he was not. He was ] giving away information. ] ] Newspapers have hit the streets here for the first time ] since the government stopped publishing April 8. Never ] mind that "yesterday's" editions were nearly a week old. ] Or that they did not really contain any news that people ] here did not know. ] ] In a city craving information, the newspapers were ] devoured as if they contained the secret formula for ] surviving the aftermath of a war that has cut off ] electricity, deprived many people of clean water and ] indefinitely suspended government paychecks. ] ] The paper, called Tarieq Al-Shaab, or The Way of the ] People, had no answers. But its mere existence in Baghdad ] - people have been executed for smuggling it from ] northern Iraq since it was banned in 1979 by Saddam ] Hussein - made its pages worth reading. I can identify with this feeling so strongly. Even with all my own access to thousands of information sources around the world, I frequently felt "out of the loop" on what was going on in Iraq, and I felt like I couldn't find enough information to satisfy my hunger. To have been in the middle of it though, with no access to internet, phones, television, or even newspapers, would have been a deep circle of hell for me. So I'm delighted that the Iraqi people are getting their newspapers going again, and I wish them all the best in accessing as many different sources of news as they can get their hands on. Let the information flow! |