Massacre in Baghdad
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by Henry Michaels -- Source: www.InformationTimes.com
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Another Market Massacre in Baghdad
Last Friday, for the second time in two days, US missiles hit a busy
market street in a working class district of Baghdad, killing and
wounding scores of innocent civilians-the same slum dwellers that
President Bush and Prime Minister Blair had claimed would rise up to
overthrow the Iraqi regime as soon as the war began.
Dr. Osama Sakhari, speaking at Baghdad's Al Noor Hospital after a day of
heavy raids across the capital, said he had counted 55 people killed and
more than 47 wounded from the market in the Shu'ale neighborhood. The
dead included at least 15 children.
Another Iraqi doctor, Hakki Is-mail Marzooki, said the deaths were in a
residential area just 300 meters from his hospital. Dr. Marzooki
described the scene as like a "massacre" and said there were no
potential military targets in the area.
Arabic language television stations Al Jazeera and Al Arabiya broadcast
pictures of bodies, including those of two children, and footage of
people carrying coffins out of the hospital. They showed scenes of
severed body parts and wounded toddlers bandaged and crying in hospital
beds. Al Jazeera broadcast the grief-stricken funerals of those killed.
According to British journalist Robert Fisk, who visited the hospitals,
at least 62 civilians had died by Saturday afternoon. He described
"appalling scenes of pain and suffering": "A two-year-old girl, Saida
Jaffar, swaddled in bandages, a tube into her nose, another into her
stomach. All I could see of her was her forehead, two small eyes and a
chin. Beside her, blood and flies covered a heap of old bandages and
swabs. Not far away, lying on a dirty bed, was three-year-old Mohamed
Amaid, his face, stomach, hands and feet all tied tightly in bandages. A
great black mass of congealed blood lay at the bottom of his bed."
Fisk refuted American and British claims that an Iraqi anti-aircraft
missile was responsible for the carnage. He cited the serial number and
coding from a piece of the missile retrieved by an old man whose home is
100 meters from the bomb's two-meter crater. The serial number was
30003-704ASB 7492 and it was followed by a "lot" number: MFR 96214 09.
There was no doubt about the authenticity of the metal fragment-Fisk saw
it before the Iraqi authorities knew it existed.
Local residents said they had heard or seen the American jet that
dropped the missile, in broad daylight and with perfect visibility in a
clear sky.
Both Fisk and another Western journalist who visited the scene-Canadian
Patrick Graham-observed that the bomb had been designed to kill and
maim, not destroy buildings. They witnessed horrible shrapnel wounds and
far-flung damage that contrasted with the relatively small size of the
meter-wide bomb crater.
In Fisk's words: "The missile sprayed hunks of metal through the
crowds-mainly women and children-and through the cheap brick walls of
local homes, amputating limbs and heads. Three brothers, the eldest 21
and the youngest 12, for example, were cut down inside the living room
of their brick hut on the main road opposite the market. Two doors away,
two sisters were killed in an identical manner." [See a Picture]
Dr. Ahmed, an anesthetist at the Al-Noor hospital, told Fisk: "We have
never seen anything like these wounds before. These people have been
punctured by dozens of bits of metal." One old man had 24 holes in the
back of his legs and buttocks, some as big as quarter coins. An X-ray
photograph showed at least 35 slivers of metal still embedded in his
body
Like the Al Shaab market massacre last Wednesday, when at least 21 Iraqi
civilians were killed or burned to death by two missiles fired by an
American jet, Shu'ale is a poor, Shia Muslim neighborhood of
single-story corrugated iron and cement food stores and two-room brick
homes.
Speaking freely without the presence of government officials, residents
bitterly condemned the American and British forces. "This is a crime," a
woman said angrily. "Yes, I know they say they are targeting the
military. But can you see soldiers here? Can you see missiles?"
A few journalists did report seeing a Scud missile on a transporter near
the Al Shaab area on Thursday and there were anti-aircraft guns around
Shu'ale. But these weapons are known to present no threat to high-flying
American war planes.
Despite the evidence cited by Fisk and Graham, the American and British
governments are continuing to blame Iraq for the deaths in both market
attacks, alleging that Iraqi workers are under orders to remove evidence
that would support that claim. "A large number of Iraqi surface-to-air
missiles have been malfunctioning. Many have failed to hit their targets
and have fallen back onto Baghdad before exploding," a British
government spokesman said.
Iraqi Information Minister Mohammed Saeed al-Sahaf ridiculed these
claims. "My explanation for their increasing crimes against civilians is
that they are feeling the weight of the series of defeats which we
inflicted on them on the outskirts of the cities and in the desert," he
said.
The massacre came amid signs of a shift in the US-British war policy to
target civilian facilities throughout Iraqi cities, including Baghdad.
US and British bombs and missiles pounded the capital repeatedly on
Friday in the heaviest day of raids since the war began. The raids
knocked out many telephone lines-a deliberate strike against civilian
infrastructure.
Massive 2,000 kilogram "bunker buster" bombs were dropped for the first
time later the same day, destroying television and other media
facilities in the capital's center. Among the targets hit were studios
used by international reporters. The explosions shook large parts of the
city, including hotels housing foreign journalists.
Despite Pentagon claims that these are legitimate "command and control"
targets, they are civilian facilities. Their destruction is a bid to
stifle coverage of both the devastation of Iraqi cities and the outraged
response of Iraqi people. More broadly, the devastation of civilian
infrastructure is an attempt to turn the population against the Iraqi
regime.
An AFP reporter saw a 50-year-old man wounded when a missile hit a
communications center in a residential neighborhood on Sunday as workers
were clearing rubble from previous strikes. Overall, Iraq claims that
4,000 civilians have been killed since Bush launched the war on March
19.
Shaken by the depth of popular resistance to their invasion, Washington
and London are changing their troops' rules of engagement, instructing
them to be more willing to kill civilians in urban areas. According to
media reports, the new rules will place less emphasis on minimizing
civilian casualties and more on destroying the enemy, even if Iraqi
military personnel are intermingled with civilians.
The BBC reported that military policy had changed from "winning hearts
and minds" to treating all Iraqi residents as possible combatants, a
shift reinforced by Saturday's suicide bomb incident in which an Iraqi
soldier killed four Americans at a military checkpoint.
One New York Times dispatch from Diwaniya, Iraq, gave a glimpse of the
reality that many civilians have been shot down already. Marine Sergeant
Eric Schrumpf, 28, confirmed that bystanders had been killed in nearby
villages. "We dropped a few civilians, but what do you do?" he said. He
recalled one such incident, in which he and other members of his unit
opened fire on an Iraqi soldier. He watched a woman standing near the
Iraqi soldier go down.
Outrage Across the Middle East
The second market massacre has fueled hostility to the US-led invasion
throughout the region. "Monstrous martyrdom in Baghdad," was the
headline in Al-Dustour, a newspaper in Amman, Jordan. "Dreadful massacre
in Baghdad," said Egypt's mass circulation Akhbar al-Youm newspaper.
Photos of two young victims of the blast covered half of its front page.
"Yet another massacre by the coalition of invaders," read the main
headline in Saudi Arabia's Al-Riyadh daily.
"Those pictures have showed that America's war is not only against the
Iraqi regime and the Iraqi army, but also against the Iraqi children and
elderly. How can we trust them now?" said Mahmoud Sahiouny, 19, a Syrian
computer science student who lives in Beirut.
While the American and Western media have barely reported the incident,
news of it quickly spread via email and the Internet. The Washington
Post found a group of women at an Internet cafe in Cairo, for example,
displaying some of the email they received on Saturday, containing
pictures of funerals, wailing women, mourning men and the bodies of
children in cradle-sized coffins.
"This is a media war, and America will realize sooner or later that we
Arabs have a million alternatives now," said Rana Khoury, 20, a
political science student at the American University of Beirut in
Lebanon. "What really hurts is when I turned to American stations, they
were talking about the humanitarian aid that the allies are providing
for the Iraqi people. They didn't even mention those who were
massacred."
Some of the people interviewed by Western journalists said they hated
leaders like Saddam Hussein but were now ready to fight the US and
British forces. "Bush is an occupier and terrorist. He thought he was
playing a video game," said George Elnaber, 36, an Arab Christian and
the owner of a supermarket in Amman. "We hate Americans more than we
hate Saddam now," he said.
In Cairo, even figures with ties to the United States political
establishment expressed anger. "Mr. Bush has lost us. We are gone.
Enough. That's the end," said Diaa Rashwan, head of the comparative
politics unit at the Al-Ahram Centre for Political and Strategic Studies
in Cairo. "If America starts winning tomorrow, there will be suicide
bombings that will start in America the next day. It is a whole new
level now."
"It is as if you are watching a horror movie," said Summer Said, a
journalist for the Cairo Times, an English-language newsmagazine. "I
thought, at first, okay, maybe it isn't a war for oil. Maybe America
does want to help. Now, it's genocide to me. Is the American government
trying to exterminate Arabs?"
"This war is affecting civilians primarily. I did not expect to see
civilians bombed and I feel exceedingly angry," wrote Ezzat El Kamhawy,
a respected Egyptian novelist. "This war can only harm the future of
democracy in the area.... What is happening now does not implicate the
future of the Arabs alone but the future of America herself."