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Welcome to Liberated Iraq
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I came on this speaking trip to the U.S. because when I was home in Baghdad, I watched on TV what President Bush was telling the American people about democracy, freedom, security and the help that the U.S. is giving the Iraqi people, and I couldn't believe the lies. So I decided to take the risk to come to the U.S. and share with you what's really going on. I do not represent any political organization or ethnic group. I come only as a mother of five, a pharmacist and a human being.
I work in one of the largest hospitals in Baghdad. I stood by helplessly during the 13 years of sanctions and watched my people -- especially children -- die from lack of medicines and poor sanitation. UNICEF estimated that over 200 children died every day as a direct result of sanctions.
Many people thought that after the U.S. occupied our country and the sanctions were lifted, the health care of the Iraqi people would improve. But the occupation has made it worse. Many of the Iraqi hospitals in cities like Baghdad, Al-Qaim, and Fallujah were bombed and destroyed. Many ambulances were attacked and health workers killed, despite the fact that it is illegal under international law to attack hospitals, ambulances and health workers.
After our hospitals were bombed and looted, millions of dollars were given to contractors to repair them. We suggested that this money be used to buy things that we urgently need, but the contractors refused and instead bought furniture and flowers and superficial things. Meanwhile, we suffer from a critical shortage of medicines, emergency supplies and anesthesia, and there is no sterilization in the operation rooms. As the director of the pharmacy department in my hospital, I refused to sit on a new chair while there were no sterile operating rooms.
Diseases that were under control under the regime of Saddam Hussein, diseases such as cholera, hepatitis, meningitis, polio, have now returned to haunt the population, especially the children. Death due to cancer has increased because treatment programs stopped and medicines are not available. The health of the Iraqi people is also devastated by environmental contamination due to the destruction of our water and sewage systems.
The health of women, particularly pregnant women, has deteriorated. Many pregnant women suffer from malnutrition. When it comes time to give birth, many women prefer to give birth at home because they fear being shot on their way to the hospital, and they know the bad conditions in the hospitals. As a result, more women are dying in childbirth, and more babies are dying.
Before the occupation, with all the problems we had under sanctions, Iraq ranked number 80 in the worldwide list of deaths of children under 5. Today, we have jumped up to number 36. UNICEF has said that the rate of severe malnutrition among Iraqi children has almost doubled since the occupation.
We have also lost our most important resources -- our doctors. Iraqi doctors are under attack from all sides. Many have been killed or very badly beaten or arrested by the American troops. In Fallujah, the hospital was bombed and doctors were killed inside. In Haditha, the Americans arrested the doctors in the hospital and beat them very badly. I saw Dr. Jamil, the only surgeon in the hospital, 21 days later. His face was still swollen and his nose was black and blue. The director was also beaten and held for a week inside the hospital.
With the chaos that has reigned since the invasion, over 200 Iraqi doctors have been kidnapped for ransom. Sometimes their families pay money and they are released, and then the whole family, terrified, flees the country. Others are killed by their kidnappers.
In all, more than 1,000 doctors have left the country. Many of them are our most experienced, most specialized doctors.
Doctors and health workers who stay are overwhelmed by the sheer number of patients and their inability to help them. Where there is a bombing or shootings, dozens of bleeding, mutilated people are rushed to the hospital; there is panic everywhere, and because we don't have the proper care, many of them die. Sometimes the staff are beaten by the patients' families. The families get desperate after seeing their loved ones die because of inadequate care and take out their frustrations on the hospital staff.
I have seen too many bodies of Iraqis maimed, bleeding, destroyed. They are shot by U.S. troops, blown up by roadside bombs, caught in the crossfire, mutilated by kidnappers. Iraq has become a continuous river of blood. The most beautiful thing God created is the human body. It should not be treated so violently.
I have seen too much suffering, too many orphaned children, too many mothers crying. I cry with them every day. I cry because I can't bear their pain. I cry because I feel so guilty that I can't help the sick and the injured. I cry because I see my people come to the hospital and die.
I remember one day in the hospital we started talking about the Americans and asking if they had brought us anything good. No, we said, with all their wealth and knowledge, they haven't shared their great technology, they haven't given us new equipment, they haven't even given us basic medicines. "Yes, they have given us something," said one doctor. "They brought us cold storage for the corpses."
The U.S. invasion has killed our people, destroyed our lives, ruined our health care system. I want the U.S. troops to get out of my country. I want them to go home now. I think that if the Americans leave, we Iraqis will have more of a chance to come together to heal our wounded nation.
Since the day I arrived in the United States, people ask me if I have any hope. Of course. No one can live without hope. My one sliver of hope lies with the American people. No other force in the world can make the American troops leave our country. No other force in the world can make this government hear our cries. Please don't let us down.
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Posted by: rsaxto on Mar 20, 2006 3:55 AM
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Posted by: Iconoclast421 on Mar 20, 2006 7:37 AM
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Here's a message from one american that yer not gonna like. You're screwed. I hate to say it, but we are a stone's throw away from losing OUR country. What makes you think we can do a damn thing about Iraq? I wish we could but we can't even stop an out of control elite from pillaging our treasury to load their own pockets. Hello? People are so brainwashed that they actually willingly allow this to happen. There's almost no resistance to the tax cuts that are bankrupting us. People don't realize that we aren't needed by the rich. When this country goes they have their island properties... their gated communities. In a country where money is prized above all else, if people are willing to give it up so easily, to the top 1%, then we truly are screwed.
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» RE: hope
Posted by: rinthy
» RE: hope
Posted by: Iconoclast421
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Posted by: roseaguilar on Mar 20, 2006 8:51 AM
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You can read about their experiences at CodePink's blog.
It'd be nice if the national media gave them some attention. Rather than interview a robotic pro-war politician who's spent a day in the Green Zone, why not interview an Iraqi woman who actually lives under occupation? An interview with an average Iraqi would be a first for the talking heads on TV. They probably couldn't handle it.
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Posted by: badkitty on Mar 20, 2006 10:06 AM
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» RE: Too sad for words
Posted by: Iconoclast421
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Posted by: gargirl on Mar 20, 2006 12:08 PM
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We stand on the brink of losing everything because so many of us are paralyzed with fear, too paralyzed to act. The right wing has successfully cowed us all into submission but there must be a way we can fight before all the freedoms we cherish are gone. Before things get any worse for the countries this administration has chosen to victimize.
We need a clear vision of the future, and someone with a good plan to get there. Woman like this doctor should have their cries heard and answered.
~gargirl
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Posted by: Ellen Remore on Mar 20, 2006 1:31 PM
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Posted by: ethanay on Mar 20, 2006 1:48 PM
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Just to clarify, many of us don't "want Iraq to fail" as Reinhard suggested in his column. We are angry that billions of dollars for rebuilding the devastated Iraqi infrastructure somehow "disappear" into a black hole, and the contractors use the remaining money to buy office furniture for hospitals instead of basic medical supplies and equipment. We are tired of apologists making light of the situation by calling it an "adventure" when thousands of good people--mostly Iraqi civilians--are dying every week from problems we could easily prevent by implementing accountability measures.
Lastly, we are angry about the empty rhetoric, public deception and political grandstanding. Yes, there have been successes in Iraq. And I'm tired of hearing them parroted over and over again: I want to know what we are doing to correct our failures and our mistakes!
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Posted by: douglashoyt on Mar 20, 2006 6:12 PM
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Americans are selfish and greedy people at heart. They stopped being good people many years ago.
They are the "me generation." They control now.
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» RE: esistance.
Posted by: Ellen Remore
» RE: esistance.
Posted by: London
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Posted by: bananamoon on Mar 20, 2006 10:29 PM
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» RE: Why Doctors
Posted by: London
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Posted by: AngryWhiteFemale on Mar 21, 2006 7:36 AM
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Posted by: Ric on Mar 22, 2006 5:58 PM
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» RE: US troops hit doctors?
Posted by: elliek
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Posted by: The heretical jew on Jun 16, 2006 11:23 PM
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