Archive > 02 July 2006

Cleaners Children Coffins

Erdla » 02 July 2006 » In Children, Iraq, Photos, Women and Children » 8 Comments

This child was one of two rushed into Yarmouk hospital in Baghdad by the policeman seen helping attend to him. The children were playing on the street when someone threw a grenade at a street cleaner. Street cleaners are often injured in Baghdad, their job is dangerous because bombers often hide their bombs in piles of rubbish. A lot of street cleaners have been killed that way. That wasn’t the case this time however, this time it was a drive by grenade attack.

Iraqi child injured by shrapnel Yarmouk hospital

Wasn’t it clever of the invading army not to bother guarding the armouries until after they’d been well and truly looted? Perhaps they were recovering from Mr. Tenet’s “slam dunk” and were waiting for the promised hordes of little fluffy bunnies to show up and shower them with rosewater and flowers.

I suppose this child was lucky in a way. Somebody was nearby who was able to rush him to a hospital, the hospital wasn’t so full of casualties that he was turned away. Of course like most urban hospitals in Iraq Yarmouk hospital isn’t exactly in the best of shape. Just another day in the overstretched hospital system brought to Iraqi children and street cleaners by the effects of the American led occupation of Iraq. Quite a quiet day really, quiet enough that this child was able to be treated. So he was a lucky child.

He was a hell of a lot luckier than his twelve year old friend who was killed in the same attack

Child Yarmouk hospital morgue killed by grenade

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markfromireland

Notes: Code cleaned up and posted by me for markfromireland who is having problems with an unreliable connection

Erdla

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The Al-Ula Market Bombing

markfromireland » 02 July 2006 » In Photos, Politics and Security » No Comments

Saturday’s bombing of the Al-Ula market in Sadr City followed by today’s three bombings in Karrada, demonstrate the security problems faced by Baghdad residents, the security forces,.and the Maliki government ensconced within the eight square mile “green zone.”

Residents recovering a body al-Ula

Al-Ula is large, very busy, and very crowded, and is known throughout Baghdad as a place where you can buy everything from household goods, to eggs. The range of goods on sale both at the stalls and in the surrounding shops is such that many people come there from outside of Sadr city. On a Saturday morning it would very crowded with shoppers on a severely limited income looking for bargains. In present-day Iraq that means that many of them were women and children.

Accounts differ as to exactly how the bombing was carried out. Some witnesses say that the bomb was contained in a parked van, while others maintain that it’s driver tried to drive it across a central reservation the better to target a police patrol. All agree that the market was packed and that massive civilian casualties were inevitable. This report from Asharq Al Awsat quotes witnesses as agreeing that had the bomber succeeded if the crossing the island of the central Street and entering the market proper that the number of victims would have been much greater.

The bomb itself was very large. It devastated a swathe of stalls, cars, and buildings in the square in which the Al-Ula market is located and was sufficiently powerful to blow some of the dead and injured two storeys into the air.

At this stage it is difficult to say exactly how many people were killed and injured by the bomb. Asharq Al Awsat puts the number killed at 68, others say 74 with more than 200 wounded many of those injured are in a serious condition and are not, at the time of writing, expected to survive. Most of the victims were taken to the Imam Ali hospital in Sadr city in the familiar combination of ambulances, taxis, and private vehicles.

The number of people severely Burnt child Imam Ali hospitalinjured by the bombing such as this child rapidly overwhelmed the facilities at Imam Ali hospital.The Imam Ali hospital’s facilities were soon overwhelmed and many of the crtitically wounded had to be diverted en route from there to other hospitals in the city. Some of the expected death toll can be ascribed to this as it meant that many of the victims quite simply got treated too late for the treatment to be effective .

The reaction (and recriminations) were immediate. Sadr city which is located in East Baghdad is one of the poorest and most crowded areas of Baghdad. Unemployment is very high even by the standards of American occupied Iraq and many of the streets and buildings are in a state of severe disrepair. As might be expected from the name Sadr City it’s a stronghold of Mehdi Army militiamen loyal to Muqtada al-Sadr and as such has often been targetted for bomb attacks. Until very recently Mehdi Army militiamen operated checkpoints and would search vehicles entering the area. Unfortunately at the behest of the American military the Interior Ministry insisted that this cease, while at the same time Major General Jihad Taher al-Luaibi the officer in charge of the anti-explosives division in Baghdad has repeatedly complained that his men have not been given explosive detection equipment.

These facts which were already widely known, have caused considerable resentment amongst ordinary residents and militiamen alike. Tensions between residents, the militia, and the occupation were unusually high already due to what appears to have been a planted story that appeared on Friday (hastily retracted by US army spokesman Major General William Caldwell) that American troops had rescued three hundred hostages from the clutches of the Mehdi Army during a raid on either on the health ministry itself or at various locations in Sadr city depending on which version of the story you read. Accordingly when American troops appeared at the bomb scene they were forced to beat a rapid retreat by an infuriated stone-throwing mob who, not unreasonably under the circumstances, were of the opinion that this particular bombing was a reprisal attack and blamed the planted story for being the provocation.

There have been several demonstations in Sadr city today by no means all of them organised by the militia demanding that the milita be given responsibility for manning checkpoints and that the police be properly equipped. These demonstations are in addition to many funerals and come on top the political storm caused by other bombings and kidnappings today.

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markfromireland

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