Parents Of Dying Iraqi Children Vent Rage At
Bush By
Samia Nakhoul 10-23-2
- "I pray to God to hit America with a massive strike
because a strike from God is much stronger than from a human being...I
want them to suffer like we're suffering. They are the reason for our
misery."
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- BAGHDAD (Reuters) - If
President George W. Bush believes that ordinary Iraqis will welcome U.S.
troops with open arms he may be in for a rude surprise.
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- However much they fear to say what they think under
the ruthless rule of President Saddam Hussein, their feelings of
deep-seated hatred towards Bush are only too clear.
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- They see the United States as primarily responsible
for the sanctions that have destroyed their economy and the social
fabric of their once-prosperous lives, as well as leaving an estimated
1.6 million children dead and many more stunted.
-
- As much as the deprivation, they resent the
humiliation of having been driven back into an almost pre-industrial
age.
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- Nowhere are these sentiments more in evidence than at
the Mansour Hospital for Children, where youngsters with cancer lie
dying from what doctors believe are the effects of the 1991 Gulf
War.
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- "Look! These are the children of Iraq," said Nouhad
Abdel-Amir pointing at the cancer ward packed with frail children with
no hair, many lying unconscious with drips strapped to their
bodies.
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- She herself was holding her one-year-old baby who had
his arm amputated to stop the progress of cancer in the absence of
injections doctors say are banned by the sanctions committee which
claims they have dual use.
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- "This is what the Americans did to us. This is the
effect of all the bombs they fired at us. It is showing now. It is all
America's fault that our children are dying," said Najate Salem, whose
son Mohammed, five, has stomach cancer.
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- International medical surveys have reported a dramatic
jump in cancer cases, genetic deformities and abnormalities in children
born after 1991, especially in the south where depleted uranium
munitions were fired by U.S. and British troops as they drove Iraqi
forces out of Kuwait.
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- "The Gulf War is the only indicator for the increase
of cancer in Iraq. The rate of cancer has risen five to seven fold more
than before 1991," said Loua'i Latif Kasha, a pathologist and director
of the 300-bed Mansour hospital.
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- He said U.S. bombings of water treatment plants, the
collapse of the health and sanitation systems as well as a stringent
embargo that made it difficult to import medicine has led to the sharp
increase in cancer among Iraqis, mainly children.
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- "Apart from these factors, radiation pollution from
depleted uranium bombs by itself causes cancer like leukaemia and
thyroid," Kasha, who trained at the Whitechapel Hospital in London, told
Reuters.
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- At Mansour hospital, desperate and broken parents sit
by their children's bedside praying for a miracle. Without a miracle,
many will die because the appropriate medicines are not all available
and are beyond the parents' means.
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- Humanitarian supplies under the U.N. oil-for-food
programme are intended to alleviate the impact of 12 years of sanctions
but cannot meet the massive need.
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- Many parents, originally from poor southern provinces,
have sold household goods and furniture to buy expensive
medicine.
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- "We've sold everything we own to get him medicine. We
have nothing left except our mattresses and he's dying," said Camila
Mohammed, whose son Ali, six, has kidney cancer.
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- Sleeping on soiled and bare mattresses in
stomach-churning smelly rooms, the children with no hair, yellow faces
and sad eyes listen to their parents venting their rage at
America.
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- "I pray to God to hit America with a massive strike
because a strike from God is much stronger than from a human being...I
want them to suffer like we're suffering. They are the reason for our
misery," said Kazema Tshaloub, 30.
-
- Whether they like or loathe Saddam, their rage and
hatred are mainly directed at the U.S. administration.
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- Most, who come from areas that witnessed an
anti-Saddam uprising after the Gulf War, distrust the declared
intentions of Bush to end Saddam's 23-year-old rule.
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- Bush's father, then President George Bush, encouraged
Shi'ites in the south and Kurds in the north to rise up against Saddam
after the Gulf War but did little to help them.
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- "Bush still wants to hurt us more. What more does he
want? Is there anything he hasn't done...All the destruction, sanctions
and diseases aren't enough? What have we done to him, we haven't hurt
him or attacked him," said another mother Ghaziya Rasheed.
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- Even if Iraq is about to change for the better, for
many people this change will come too late. Nothing will bring back
their loved ones.
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- "They fought us with all their means. Our children are
stunted, malnourished and illiterate," said Sahera Khalil whose son
Ahmed, four, has leukaemia.
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- "In six weeks at the hospital I've seen eight children
die," she said. "The Americans have no mercy in their hearts. This is
what they have done to the future generation of Iraq."
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