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Families visiting wounded victims
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Ahmed
knocked on the door. “They are coming. I am sorry.”
Planes
had left my country to drop bombs on his and he was sorry. It
was the wee small hours of March 20th. The windows were crossed
with parcel tape to stop them shattering. We had as much bottled
water as we could afford because no one knew how long it would
go on. Already the price of water was five times that of petrol.
A
bit after 4am it started, the sky flashing with yellow sparkles
as if the stars were burning out, forty cruise missiles roaring
through the sky that first morning, no one quite sure whether
this was really the start, unable to believe they were really
firing huge explosives at this city full of families, friends,
shops and schools.
For
the next twelve days, until I was told to leave by the nervous
Iraqi foreign ministry, I stayed in
Baghdad
, interviewing civilian casualties in the hospitals. Fear and
suspicion were intense and it took time to negotiate our way
into the hospitals. The first day I was allowed in was March
24th.
The
doctor was called to the emergency room, brought us with him, to
the chaos of a family still screaming, still bleeding, Fatima
cradling one child after another, Nada with an open skull
fracture and her leg torn apart, Rana deeply concussed,
struggling to breathe, Mohammed a patchwork of shrapnel cuts,
eyes wide with panic, eight year old Zahra dead in the rubble
along with her aunt (Fatima’s sister, Hana, who was due to
graduate with a teaching degree in the summer).
It
was the seventh day after the wedding of Hana’s brother,
Khalid, to Nahda. They brought Nahda to the house at
4pm
, exactly the time when the rocket (one of three fired from a
plane which had been circling overhead) hit. It took off the
entire upper storey. Khalid collapsed when given the news, as if
his breath were entwined with that of his new wife, crushed to
death.
Taalib
drove us around, looking for the possible military target, the
base, the ammunition factory, even a communications tower or
electricity station, that could have been the intended target,
but we found nothing. Almost a year later a group of us were
working in a school in
Diyala
Bridge
, near where the farmhouse was; so we went to find them and look
again for the intended target.
The
directions were only approximate, as much detail as Taalib could
remember, then we started asking around for the house that was
bombed. Neither of us recognized the building we were shown to.
Nor did we recognize the woman outside, or the children peeping
through the windows, or the description of the attack: a rocket
struck one of the houses at
midnight
, killing sixteen, maybe seventeen people and demolishing three
houses.
Fourteen-year-old
Nabil stood up out of the row of young men sitting on the step,
a little man. “I came back at
noon
from my uncle’s house and the house was destroyed. My mother
and father and my five brothers and sisters were all dead. I am
the only one left,” he said, unable to look at another face.
How
appalling it is to go out in the morning with three dead and to
come back in the afternoon with twenty. We found
Fatima
’s family in the end, though she and her children are back in
the city now. “Their family is broken,” Khalid said. “They
are too sad. Their house is near the air force center; so they
came here because they were afraid it would be bombed. It was
bombed, of course, but her home was not so badly damaged as
ours.”
Ajama
returned from a relative’s funeral; his relative was killed in
the crossfire between US soldiers and Iraqi militiamen. He
thanked us for coming. Like Nabil’s family, no one has asked
after them since we saw them in the hospital. But he was afraid:
“If someone sees us with foreigners, they will tell the
Americans we are with the resistance or tell the militias we are
working for the Americans. They will come and say, ‘How did
you communicate with these foreigners, how did they know about
you, why did they come here?’ We are more afraid now than we
were before the war,” the Shiite farmer and small businessman
added.
The
Poker Face: Getting Used to Things Exploding Around You
There
is not a single child in
Iraq
without some degree of post-traumatic stress. |
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Since
the war, I’ve often been asked how it changed me. I can’t
tell. But I have learnt from the Iraqi women to wear a kind of
poker face when I walk down the road – expressionless,
slightly severe, not responding to any calls or comments from
either side. Last night’s bomb at the hotel round the corner
sent a spasm of reaction up my leg, but the poker face didn’t
flinch.
Only
when young men started running past me towards the explosion did
I realize I had become used to it, used to the sudden fullness
of the air, the bursting, the tremor through the ground. A year
ago I couldn’t have imagined being used to things blowing up
around the corner. But already a few hours earlier a blast in an
electricity box in the next street had shaken our windows and
failed to hit two Humvees. Only later I notice the physical
symptoms of fear and shock. You never really get used to things
exploding around you.
Dr.
Ali Hameed is one of Iraq
’s few authorities on post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).
He believes there is not a single child in
Iraq
without some degree of post-traumatic stress, and that play
therapy is the best, perhaps the only means of diagnosing and
rehabilitating the children in a country where “mental
illness” is heavily stigmatized.
Formerly
head of the PTSD program, his funding from the ministry of
health was withdrawn by its American advisors who demanded
results after only a few weeks. The funds were reallocated to a
center for torture victims of the past regime, a project which,
though important, is also politically much more valuable for the
new leadership than one which criticizes the harm done by the
war, sanctions and occupation.
Since
the invasion, thousands of people have been arrested in house
raids, at checkpoints or from workplaces, imprisoned without
charges, without trial, without access to lawyers or visits from
their families, sometimes for many months. Released cellmates
are the only source of information for most prisoners’
families, the only confirmation that the disappeared person is
still alive.
Amid
crowds of mothers outside Abu Ghraib prison, Hamdia waits every
day for information about her son, Hayder Sahib. “Under the
old regime he escaped from the army, and even when they caught
him they let his mother see him – but now, no. We thought the
Americans would do something good for us but they did not. They
did the worst. I just want to see my son. Just let me see him.
They should at least tell us where he is.”
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A US soldier detaining an Iraqi protester October 5, 2003
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A
former detainee, Abdul Rahman explained that the US
administration has continued the old regime’s practice of
paying for information and acting on it without verification so
that a grudge can be profitably exercised by accusing a
neighbour of working for the resistance then watching US forces
arrest him.
“Nothing
has changed,” the people outside the prison say. “The
Americans are the same as Saddam.”
Hundreds
of bank clerks, mostly women, have been threatened with arrest,
sixteen actually imprisoned, and forced to pay for the
discrepancy between the genuine value received and that given
out in the exchange of the old Saddam notes for the new
currency. There is no suspicion of any fraud or theft by the
clerks. They were instructed to pay out new notes for old ones,
even if they appeared to be forged, as there was no way of
verifying which were forgeries. Now the shortfall will be taken
from their wages in instalments.
Their
lawyer, Faleh Maktuf, says there’s no legal basis for the
arrests, nor the coerced payments, but in the absence of a
legal framework, power is unchecked in the hands of
ministers, police and judges. “Nothing has changed,” he
added.
Released
cellmates are the only source of information for most
prisoners’ families. |
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The
last few days we’ve been working in some of the poorest
schools around
Baghdad, in Sadr
City, Afdhalia and
Diyala
Bridge. Not one of them had a window intact, nor a working toilet –
either without running water or with constantly erupting water
pipes which caused the toilet to overflow.
There aren’t enough
schools for all the kids and they’ve been segregated since
1999 so the classrooms – with their limited furniture – are
rammed with boys in the mornings and girls in the afternoons, or
vice versa. Headmaster Mohammed pointed out that these shifts
mean there is no time for teacher training.
Add
to this the lack of textbooks, because the contracts to print
the new ones were due to be allocated by UNICEF, who then
withdrew. There are no other teaching materials. It means the
teachers can only lecture. Each child gets 12 pencils a year, an
average of 1.5 per school month. “But children don’t keep a
pencil for a month. They keep it for a few days,” Mohammed
said.
The
US
government-linked corporation Bechtel is involved with school
rehabilitation. Abbas is a volunteer in the Nasariyah-based
organization E’maar (Rebuilding) which identifies and carries
out small to mid-scale reconstruction projects with local
communities, like building a mud brick school in a marsh village
which has never had a school before.
Bechtel
works in Nasariyah, another Shiite area: “They have a contract
for $40,000 to rehabilitate a school and they immediately
subcontracted the work for $28,000, keeping $12,000 for doing
nothing. The work is poor. They just paint the walls, with bad
brushes and paint, so there are bristles on the walls. One of
the schools had a new fence built and it fell down. Two girls
got broken hips.” Diversion of wealth into the hands of those
favoured by the leadership: Abbas laughed dryly, “Nothing has
changed.”
Unemployment
is 60-70% throughout Iraq. Workers in several industries have been struggling against the
newly appointed US
bosses and against the setting of unfair and unliveable wage
scales by the Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA). Attempts to
set up trade unions have been suppressed in several places,
including the
port
of
Um Qasr, operated by SSA Marine, formerly known as Stevedoring Services
of America.
And
so on. Little has been done for women’s rights, though the CPA
has been busily setting up “women’s centers” and other
hollow enterprises designed to emphasize Saddam’s wrongs –
backed up by the weapons coalition members sold him – while
some really positive women’s projects coming from the
Iraqi women themselves are attacked by groups which object to
them (unprotected by the coalition). Women frequently say that
before the war, if they had few rights, at least they had
security.
Of
course it’s not quite true to say nothing has changed. Bashar
is out of prison, where he was tortured. Saif and his brother
are not on the “security list.” The Kurds are celebrating
the establishment, finally, of a federal state of Iraqi
Kurdistan. Dissatisfaction with the invasion and occupation does
not necessarily mean that people want Saddam back, but I often
hear people say the
US
is no better. Bashar said he would rather the Iraqi people had
been allowed to get rid of him themselves, though it would have
taken longer and he would have still been in prison.
But
it’s undoubtedly true to say that human rights are not being
respected, that the Iraqi people are still being crushed between
other people’s agendas, that financial gain and cronyism are
still dictating policy, that there is no security, inadequate
electricity or petrol rationing, and that Iraq is not free.
Jo
Wilding is an Iraq-based British human rights campaigner, writer
and trainee lawyer from Bristol,
UK. 29-year old Wilding first came to
Iraq
in August 2001 with Voices in the Wilderness. Then she returned
to Iraq as an independent observer in February 2003 and stayed
for the month before the war and the first 11 days of the
bombing as a human shield, before being expelled by the Iraqi
foreign ministry as part of a purge of independent foreigners.
Currently
inside Iraq, Wilding is taking part in Circus 2 Iraq, “a small
group of circus performers - fools, clowns, jugglers, stilt
walkers and magicians - set up to… perform and give circus
skills workshops to children [in Iraq] traumatized by sanctions,
war and its aftermath.”
Her
writings about
Iraq
and ordinary Iraqis were published in the Guardian, the New
Zealand Herald, Counterpunch, Australian radio, and in
Japan, Korea
and Pakistan
.
Click
here
to visit Wilding’s website.
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