INFORMATION CLEARING HOUSE
How The U.S. Murdered a
City
Fallujah: The Truth at Last
Doctor
Salam Ismael took aid to Fallujah last month. This is a report of his
visit.
02/17/05 - "SW" - IT WAS the smell that
first hit me, a smell that is difficult to describe, and one that will never
leave me. It was the smell of death. Hundreds of corpses were decomposing in the
houses, gardens and streets of Fallujah. Bodies were rotting where they had
fallen-bodies of men, women and children, many half-eaten by wild
dogs.
A wave of hate had wiped out two-thirds of the town, destroying
houses and mosques, schools and clinics. This was the terrible and frightening
power of the US military assault.
The accounts I heard over the next few
days will live with me forever. You may think you know what happened in
Fallujah. But the truth is worse than you could possibly have
imagined.
In Saqlawiya, one of the makeshift refugee camps that surround
Fallujah, we found a 17 year old woman. "I am Hudda Fawzi Salam Issawi from the
Jolan district of Fallujah," she told me. "Five of us, including a 55 year old
neighbour, were trapped together in our house in Fallujah when the siege
began.
"On 9 November American marines came to our house. My father and
the neighbour went to the door to meet them. We were not fighters. We thought we
had nothing to fear. I ran into the kitchen to put on my veil, since men were
going to enter our house and it would be wrong for them to see me with my hair
uncovered. "This saved my life. As my father and neighbour approached the door,
the Americans opened fire on them. They died instantly.
"Me and my 13
year old brother hid in the kitchen behind the fridge. The soldiers came into
the house and caught my older sister. They beat her. Then they shot her. But
they did not see me. Soon they left, but not before they had destroyed our
furniture and stolen the money from my father's pocket."
Hudda told me
how she comforted her dying sister by reading verses from the Koran. After four
hours her sister died. For three days Hudda and her brother stayed with their
murdered relatives. But they were thirsty and had only a few dates to eat. They
feared the troops would return and decided to try to flee the city. But they
were spotted by a US sniper.
Hudda was shot in the leg, her brother ran
but was shot in the back and died instantly. "I prepared myself to die," she
told me. "But I was found by an American woman soldier, and she took me to
hospital." She was eventually reunited with the surviving members of her
family.
I also found survivors of another family from the Jolan
district. They told me that at the end of the second week of the siege the US
troops swept through the Jolan. The Iraqi National Guard used loudspeakers to
call on people to get out of the houses carrying white flags, bringing all their
belongings with them. They were ordered to gather outside near the Jamah
al-Furkan mosque in the centre of town.
On 12 November Eyad Naji Latif
and eight members of his family-one of them a six month old child-gathered their
belongings and walked in single file, as instructed, to the mosque.
When
they reached the main road outside the mosque they heard a shout, but they could
not understand what was being shouted. Eyad told me it could have been "now" in
English. Then the firing began. US soldiers appeared on the roofs of surrounding
houses and opened fire. Eyad's father was shot in the heart and his mother in
the chest.
They died instantly. Two of Eyad's brothers were also hit,
one in the chest and one in the neck. Two of the women were hit, one in the hand
and one in the leg. Then the snipers killed the wife of one of Eyad's brothers.
When she fell her five year old son ran to her and stood over her body. They
shot him dead too. Survivors made desperate appeals to the troops to stop
firing.
But Eyad told me that whenever one of them tried to raise a
white flag they were shot. After several hours he tried to raise his arm with
the flag. But they shot him in the arm. Finally he tried to raise his hand. So
they shot him in the hand.
The five survivors, including the six month
old child, lay in the street for seven hours. Then four of them crawled to the
nearest home to find shelter. The next morning the brother who was shot in the
neck also managed to crawl to safety. They all stayed in the house for eight
days, surviving on roots and one cup of water, which they saved for the baby. On
the eighth day they were discovered by some members of the Iraqi National Guard
and taken to hospital in Fallujah. They heard the Americans were arresting any
young men, so the family fled the hospital and finally obtained treatment in a
nearby town.
They do not know in detail what happened to the other
families who had gone to the mosque as instructed. But they told me the street
was awash with blood. I had come to Fallujah in January as part of a
humanitarian aid convoy funded by donations from Britain.
Our small
convoy of trucks and vans brought 15 tons of flour, eight tons of rice, medical
aid and 900 pieces of clothing for the orphans. We knew that thousands of
refugees were camped in terrible conditions in four camps on the outskirts of
town.
There we heard the accounts of families killed in their houses, of
wounded people dragged into the streets and run over by tanks, of a container
with the bodies of 481 civilians inside, of premeditated murder, looting and
acts of savagery and cruelty that beggar belief.
Through the ruins That
is why we decided to go into Fallujah and investigate. When we entered the town
I almost did not recognise the place where I had worked as a doctor in April
2004, during the first siege.
We found people wandering like ghosts
through the ruins. Some were looking for the bodies of relatives. Others were
trying to recover some of their possessions from destroyed homes.
Here
and there, small knots of people were queuing for fuel or food. In one queue
some of the survivors were fighting over a blanket.
I remember being
approached by an elderly woman, her eyes raw with tears. She grabbed my arm and
told me how her house had been hit by a US bomb during an air raid. The ceiling
collapsed on her 19 year old son, cutting off both his legs.
She could
not get help. She could not go into the streets because the Americans had posted
snipers on the roofs and were killing anyone who ventured out, even at
night.
She tried her best to stop the bleeding, but it was to no avail.
She stayed with him, her only son, until he died. He took four hours to
die.
Fallujah's main hospital was seized by the US troops in the first
days of the siege. The only other clinic, the Hey Nazzal, was hit twice by US
missiles. Its medicines and medical equipment were all destroyed. There were no
ambulances-the two ambulances that came to help the wounded were shot up and
destroyed by US troops.
We visited houses in the Jolan district, a poor
working class area in the north western part of the city that had been the
centre of resistance during the April siege.
This quarter seemed to have
been singled out for punishment during the second siege. We moved from house to
house, discovering families dead in their beds, or cut down in living rooms or
in the kitchen. House after house had furniture smashed and possessions
scattered.
In some places we found bodies of fighters, dressed in black
and with ammunition belts.
But in most of the houses, the bodies were of
civilians. Many were dressed in housecoats, many of the women were not
veiled-meaning there were no men other than family members in the house. There
were no weapons, no spent cartridges.
It became clear to us that we were
witnessing the aftermath of a massacre, the cold-blooded butchery of helpless
and defenceless civilians.
Nobody knows how many died. The occupation
forces are now bulldozing the neighbourhoods to cover up their crime. What
happened in Fallujah was an act of barbarity. The whole world must be told the
truth.
Dr Salam Ismael, now 28 years old, was head of junior doctors
in Baghdad before the invasion of Iraq. He was in Fallujah in April 2004 where
he treated casualties of the assault on the city.
At the end of 2004 he
came to Britain to collect funds for an aid convoy to Fallujah. Now the British
government does not want Dr Salam Ismael’s testimony to be heard.
He was
due to come here last week to speak at trade union and anti-war meetings. But he
was refused entry. The reason given was that he received expenses, covering the
basic costs of his trip, when he came to Britain last year and this constitutes
“illegal working”.
Dr Salam Ismael merely wishes to speak the truth. Yet
it seems the freedom that Bush and Blair claim to champion in Iraq does not
extend to allowing its citizens to travel freely.
Legal challenges,
supported by the Stop the War
Coalition, were launched this week in an effort to allow Dr Salam
Ismael to come to Britain.
This article was first published by www.socialistworker.co.uk
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