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We had to postpone our trip to Al-Qaim and Haditha several times for 2 weeks.
Many times the road was closed because of some military operations. We decided
to go to the refugee camps first, be ready to move from there as soon as the road
is clear. There were 8100 refugee families now (last time, before Oct 1, they
were 7450) distributed on the nearest towns, villages and in the desert. Some
of the camps were cut from any kind of relief, especially those which were across
the Euphrates, because the American troops bombed all the bridges in Alqaim (3)
and Haditha (2). The need now is for thick clothes, especially for children, blankets,
and medicines for daily use, apart from food. The new families were those who
escaped the latest attack on Alqaim (Oct1) and Haditha (Oct 5) The River’s
Gate, as it was called. One of the biggest emergency relief organizations in Iraq
now admitted that they can not reach the behind-the-river villages.
Arriving in Alqaim general hospital on Oct 25 afternoon, after being lost on
a desert detour for more than 2 hours, and coming from the nearest refugee camp
where we listened to different stories of the last attack on Oct 1,2005, we
were well prepared to listen to the crowed at the emergency room. A big black
banner says that the ambulance driver, Mahmood Chiad, was shot on Oct 1,2005
by the American troops while he was trying to help some injured families.
A young man, H.Khalaf, was lying on a trolley, soaked in blood. He was shot
in his genitals by an American sniper while he was going home from the market
just across the street. The shot injured his right thigh, his testes, and went
out through his left thigh.
“There was nothing, no shooting, no bombing, nothing” a neighbor
who brought Khalaf to the hospital said. “We heard the shot, and he was
lying there bleeding. We could not reach him. He crawled to the side street
for few minutes”. The doctor does not know yet how bad the injury is.
The bleeding was still running.
In the ward another young man, Salah Hamid, was shot under the belt too. He
was driving his taxi at 10 am on Monday Oct17, 2005 in the market place when
he was shot by the American snipers. Salah was so angry that he cried and used
obscene words (unacceptable in those areas). His car was completely ruined.
The doctor explained that a large part of his intestine had to be cut.
In the doctors’ hall, the windows, the curtains, the walls were covered
with bullet shots.
The hospital’s assistant director described how bad and difficult the
situation is, the continuous bombing of houses and cars, the snipers who shoot
indiscriminately any moving thing (two days ago they killed 6 donkeys), the
besieged city, the closed highway “I do not understand why they cut the
high way and let families go through the desert, they are searching everything
and everybody! Now, on top of everything else, the oxegen tubes are not allowed
in the hospital”.
The administrative assistant explained the situation in the bombed areas across
the river (Euphrates) after the bridges were bombed in the attack “There
are many villages: Rumana, Al-Beidha, Al-Ish, Dgheima, Baghooz, Al-rabot….etc
where families sought shelter from the bombing. These villages are cut of any
kind of help now, and are exposed to regular bombing. There is no doctor or clinic
in an area of 110 kilometers along the river. The injured families have to be
brought by boats, bleed to death, or die under the rubbles. It is impossible to
count the dead, their families bury them on the spot, without any document, and
of course no media coverage. Civilians, relatives and neighbors help evacuating
those buried under the rubbles. Snipers are still hurting us most. On the Referendum
day Oct 15, no one would dare to go out; I would not, even if I was given the
post of a president”.
The ambulance driver, Mahmood Chiad, 35, was going to Karabla, to help some
injured family during the attack. He was shot and killed by a bullet in the
left chest. The ambulance was then hit by a grenade which ripped it in two parts,
and burnt it. It was still there, but we could not film in the no man’s
land, as they call it. Mahmood left a widow and six children; the oldest of
them, Aimen (m), is 10 years old. “The family was not given any compensation
or pension” said his colleague Muneer Said “he was very poor, living
in a tin extension of a house, his family should be taken care of”.
Early next morning, around 7 am, there was noise and crowd in the hospital.
Two cars covered with dust, and few men were standing at the emergency gate.
One old man, over 60, was sobbing and talking to the sky, repeating hysterically
“please come and see what happened to me”, other men were crying
silently.
In the emergency ward, a girl of ten was lying on one trolley, and a young
woman on another. They were still conscious. The girl, Yosr Jasim Mohammad Al-Ta’i,
10, (going to 5th grade, as she said proudly), was injured in her feet, back,
and right ear, which were covered with blood. She did not know that she is the
only survivor of a family of 8. Her father, her mother Ibtisam Thiyab Othman,
and five of her brothers and sister were buried dead under the rubbles when
the American airplanes bombed Al-Ish village at 2 am that day, Oct 26.2005.
The woman, Sa’diya, 35, was injured in her thigh. She was rapped in a
burnt out quilt. Sa’diya was in her uncles’ house. Her house was
blown up by the American troops the day before “they took the women and
children out, and blow the house, I do not know if they arrested the men or
they blow them inside the house. We came to my uncles’ house yesterday,
today at 2 am we were bombed again”. Sa’diya was terribly shocked.
“I do not know how many people were killed. We were more than 30 in the
house. My three uncles, their wives and children, my aunt, and five guests in
the diwan (guest room), were killed. I do not know if there are any survivors,
I was buried under the wall. I saw my uncle Idan, and two of the children Farooq
(m)8, and Ahmad (m) 7, they were dead”. (Sa’diy did not know that
Yosr, one of the guests and herself are the only survivors of the many families
in that house).
Khalifa Mokhlos the only survivor among the 4 men in the guest room said that
the other 4 men were killed when two missiles hit the house. “Jasim M.
Mokhlos (30), Idan Abdulla Mosa (52), Awad M.Mosa (45), and Moslem K.Hussein
(30) were all killed”.
K., the chief of community council in Al-Risala district, himself handicapped
in the Iraqi-Iranian war, was telling us many stories of demolished houses and
killed families. We asked to visit some of them. He was hesitant, but then suggested
that we only visit those in the relatively safe districts. Alqaim now looks
so different from Alqaim we saw 18 months ago in the first major American attack
in April 2004. Then it was a city full of life, shops, offices, people, police…there
was movement in the street. Now it is a dead city. Fear and suspicion are the
kings of the streets.
The first family was of Saggar Hamdan, a Land Cruiser driver who was taking
his- and his brother in law’s- families to the Okashat refugee camp 200
kilometers away in the desert at 4 pm on the attack first day. His father explained
that” there were 19 women and children in the car when it was shot and
burnt by the American troops. Saggar , his wife Khadija, and his 6 children
(Ala’(m)10, Adil (m), Omar(m), Sheima’(f), Lamia(f)’, and
a baby) and his niece were killed. No one was allowed to approach the car until
it was no more than ashes”. It was only after 5 days that a cousin, Hashim
Hamid, was allowed to get the bodies.
“I had to jeopardize my life, hold a white flag and stand in the American
convoy way” Hashim said. “I told them that I wanted the bodies of
my cousin and his family. The American Commander said “ I am sorry, it
was a mistake, we did not know that it was a family”, and he gave me a
plastic sac full of the charred bodies.
The second family was of Mohammad Jabir, a boy of nine years who was shot by
an American sniper at his house door in the “Death Street” on Thursday
Oct 20, 2005.
“He was going to his uncles’ house, across the street in the railway
houses” his father said, trying hard to hold his tears “They were
4 of my children, went out to visit their uncle’s family, they were shot
at immediately. They returned back, Mohammad was putting his hand on his chest,
said I am injured, and then fell to the ground. He was bleeding. We tried to
save him, but no ambulance or car was allowed to pass through. His uncle did
not mind the shooting; he drove his car and took us to the hospital. By then
Mohammad was dead”.
The mother was heavily covered with black: “when we tried to take him
to the hospital, the soldiers shot at us. I was shouting, but no one dared to
approach. We sat on the ground waiting for the shooting to stop, until his uncle
came with the car”
Mohammad is the 13th child killed by a sniper in the railway houses “they
call it the Death Street, one of the children who were killed was only 1.5 years,
another was 3. I can take you to visit their families all. On October 23, 2005,
at 2 pm, the American airplane was going and coming back many times on the street
shooting all the time”. Jabir left his house and is now living in the
family’s big house with other 5 families in another area.
The third family was of Attiya Mikhlif. The house was no more than a heap of rubbles.
It was bombed at 6 am on August 30, 2005. There was no one of the family left
to tell the story. Neighbors were hesitant to talk. “The old man died years
ago” one of the neighbors volunteered to talk at last. “There was
his old wife, Dalla Hardan 55, his three sons, Daham 35, Rashid 25, and Salman
18, and two daughters in law: Rafaah 19 and Kholood 19. Rashid, his bride Rafaah,
Salman and his bride Kholood were all newly married”. All of them were killed
that morning.
-“Why do you think the house was bombed?”
- “Who knows, the Americans say that there were insurgents in the house,
but they were families as you see. And anyway, you do not air bomb houses to
kill insurgents who are supposed to be in!!”
The fourth family was of Kawan Abu Mohammad. On September 8, 2005, the house
in an agricultural area called the Senjaq was bombed killing 11 civilians, most
of them children. The old man, Kawan 70, his son Mohammad 50, a teacher of physics,
his daughter in law Hamdiya 40 (Mohammad’s wife), and their 4 children:
Dhoha 16(f), Ro’a 10(f), Obeida 12(m), and Hotheifa 4 (m)were all killed
under the rubles. Khalid, 18, Kawan’s grandson whose uncle Mohammad was
helping him in physics, Amjad(m) 22, Zeinab 17(f), and Saja 8 (f)were all Kawan’s
grandchildren, who were visiting their grandfather were all killed in that bombing
too. Two members of the family survived: Mahmood Kawan 25(m) was paralyzed and
Nahida 16, Amjad’s sister was mildly injured.
K., of the community council, took us then to Al-Risala district where 8 houses
were bombed together on Saturday 22, 2005 around 3 am, and the Big Mosque on
23rd . Fortunately, they were empty. “The Americans believe that the insurgents
hide in these empty houses” K. explained. Many families returned from
the refugee camps to find their houses destroyed.
In one of the houses in Al-Salaam district, Alwan Abdul Kareem refused to stay
with his family in the refugee camp in Anah. He found it unbearable to live
as a refugee, so he returned home alone 4 days later. The house was bombed on
the same day (Oct 22), he was killed under the heavy stairs where he was hiding,
eating his sohoor (the last meal before fasting). Alwan was 58, a gardener and
a school guard. We met his family in Anah refugee camp. He left a wife Shokriya,
40, and eight children.
In Anah refugee camp 5 families (around 10 each) lived in one house. They did
not receive the monthly food ration for 3 months. K., very anxious to show us
how bad the damage was, could not keep his promise of staying away from the dangerous
areas. Near the railway station, a completely damaged hotel was used by the municipality
to host the very poor families for a symbolic price. So is the railway itself.
Shawkat A. Abbood, who just arrived from Alqaim, told us about the attack on
Si'da, a village 10 kilometers to the east, said that on October 1, the market
place was closed at 10 am, the city was besieged from two remaining places:
Si’da and Karabla, 10 kilometers away. The electricity and phones were
cut, all offices were closed, and cars were prevented from moving … “When
the bombing began, we remained at home. Translators in military vehicles told
the people through megaphones to stay at home, that their lives would be in
danger if they move out. We could hear the bombing, but we did not know where
exactly. The bombing continued for 4 days. Airplanes were roaming 24 hours;
the intensive bombing was at night. In the Rumana village they bombed 4 houses.
There were 12 injured the first day. We do not know exactly about the dead,
may be 30-40”
-“It was a declared attack, why the families did not leave?”
- “Some families do not have any alternative, or too poor to move, some
put tents in the farms of the Senjaq area. And any way what was declared was
that the American troops are going to enter Alqaim with the Iraqi troops, they
called the civilians to cooperate with the troops to arrest the insurgents”.
Shawkat’s mother, 55, was crying, listening to her son. She is diabetic,
and too frightened “when I hear the bombing, I shiver, feel the pain in
my back; I feel the ceiling coming down and crushing me”.
In Alqaim we met A.M. an employee in the electricity office. “We tried
3 times to repair the electricity; the Americans were shooting at us every time.
The third time they said you have 30 minutes to repair it. It takes two hours,
as you know, on the desert road to reach the station. But we managed to do.
The other station is near the customs office (which is now a military base)
we could not reach that point”. The same story is repeated with the water.
Shareef, a fireman, and an emergency relief volunteer was very angry “where
are the nations of the world, the Moslems, the Arabs…millions of them
pray everyday, do not they see what is happening to us”.