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Doctors at the main hospital in Baquba, north of Baghdad, have gone on strike,
saying they are fed up with constant abuse at the hands of aggressive Iraqi police
and soldiers.
Staff and security guards at the hospital, the largest in the province with
more than 100 doctors and 400 beds, handed a petition to the director on Saturday
saying they would only handle emergency cases until their grievances were addressed.
"We want the governor and the minister to do something to protect us from
the organized terrorism of the police and army," Mohammed Hazim, a specialist
at Baquba General Hospital, said.
"There is continuous harassment at the hands of the police and army. They
are rude, very disrespectful and aggressive."
Doctors said that on Friday night, the latest of several incidents in recent
weeks, members of an elite police rapid reaction unit had contacted the hospital's
security staff to tell them to alert doctors to get ready for patients.
Dozens of police, some in uniform, some in civilian clothes and all carrying
weapons, had then turned up with wounded colleagues demanding treatment.
Doctor Ali Hussein said he had tried to treat one policeman hit in the leg
with shrapnel, but when he told him that he was going to need an x-ray, the
officer became abusive.
"He told me to go to hell and then started to beat me," Hussein told
Reuters. "Then he told other policemen to put a bag over my head and they
tried to take me out to their cars to take me away," he said.
"Our security guards tried to stop them, telling them I was a doctor,
but they didn't listen and beat the security guards too. Then one of them put
a gun to my head and threatened me."
COMPLAINTS OF ABUSE
Other doctors and security staff at the hospital corroborated Hussein's account
of Friday's incident, saying they were stunned by the behavior of the police,
who arrived in a group of around 50, all of them heavily armed.
"I swear they were not normal. They seemed drunk or medicated, they were
crazed," another doctor said, asking that his name not be used for fear
of reprisals. He said he had signed the petition handed to the hospital director.
"We can't work under such circumstances. No one can work with police with
weapons all around. They are so abusive."
Doctors at Baghdad's Yarmouk hospital, one the busiest, recently reported a
similar incident involving Iraq soldiers.
Iraq's security forces, particularly the police, have in recent months been
accused of wrongful arrest, abuse, beatings and even torture by Iraqis, who
say their attitude has changed little since Saddam Hussein's era.
Some put the aggressive behavior down to the stress and strain they are under
battling an insurgency that frequently attacks and kills large numbers of police
and soldiers.
The Iraqi government has said that it is aware of complaints of abuses and
excessive force by the police and is doing everything it can to ensure training
addresses the problem.
The director of the Baquba hospital said he had received the petition, signed
by doctors and security staff, and said he hoped to discuss the situation with
the regional governor soon.
"We need order. Doctors feel afraid, they don't know what could happen
to them, and we can't have that," he said, asking not to be identified
for fear of retribution.