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In October 2004, a scientific study published in the UK medical
magazine, The Lancet, suggests that
at least 100,000 people have been killed in Iraq since the 2003
invasion. More than half of the victims have been women and children
killed by "the effect of areal weaponry",
in other words, air strikes. The survey was undertaken by public health
experts from Iraq and the USA (Bloomberg
School of Public Health in Baltimore,
Maryland). The figures are much
higher than earlier estimates based on media sources. Some studies
suggest that even these figures are an under-estimate.
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In November 2004, the secretary general of the United
Nations, Kofi Annan, warns the USA
and UK not to attack the city of Fallujah
as that would make the situation in Iraq more
difficult. His plea is ignored. The USA heavily bombs the city from the
air for several days and orders civilians to leave.
Ralph Peters,
a former military officer told USA newspaper,
New York Post:
"We must not be afraid to make an example of
Fallujah… We need to demonstrate that the United States military cannot
be deterred or defeated. If that means widespread destruction, we must
accept the price Even if Fallujah has to go the way of Carthage, reduced
to shards, the price will be worth it''.

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A month after stating that most of Iraq is
"completely safe'', the USA-appointed Prime Minister,
Iyad Allawi, declares martial law
throughout all of Iraq except the
Kurdish north. The new powers allow
public gatherings to be broken up, private houses to be entered without
warrants, and people to be detained without trial.
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The USA invades the city of
Fallujah
(population normally 300,000) with over 10,000 troops for the second
time in 2004, taking the Fallujah General
Hospital, the city's main health care facility. Patients in the
hospital are handcuffed and dragged out of their rooms for examination
by troops. Most are later released. Mehdi
Abdulla, a 33 year old ambulance driver describes USA actions:
"Doctors in Fallujah are reporting to me that
there are patients in the hospital there who were forced out by the
Americans. Some doctors there told me they had a major operation going,
but the soldiers took the doctors away and left the patient to die".
Nazzal Emergency Hospital, a
recently constructed trauma clinic, is bombed and destroyed killing 20
doctors and a dozen patients; a nearby warehouse for medical supplies is
also destroyed.
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Half of the city's 120 mosques are destroyed by air strikes. The
effect on the Arab and Muslim world of images of mosques being attacked
with tanks during the Islamic holy month of Ramadan can only be
imagined. Many people are killed and bodies have to be buried in gardens
due to the curfew. The wounded cannot get medical attention. There are
reports of bodies lying in the streets.

According to
Colonel Mike Ramos,
anyone violating the curfew is part of a "free fire zone" - in other
words, anything that moves will be shot at. Colonel Gary Brandl, a USA marine, tells the UK television
station, the BBC:
"The enemy has a face. It is Satan's. He is
in Fallujah, and we are going to destroy him."
One U.S. Marine Commander,
Lieutenant Colonel Bryan McCoy spoke toTime magazine about
the US, British led war on Iraq (April 14, 2003) He told reporters:
“Let’s quit pussyfooting and call it what it is. It’s
murder, it’s slaughter, it’s clubbing baby harp seals.”
Muhammad Abbud has to watch his 9
year old son, Ghaith, bleed to death
after being hit by shrapnel: "We just
bandaged his stomach and gave him water, but he was losing a lot of
blood. He died this afternoon". This story is extensively
covered by Middle Eastern media but ignored by Western television news.
Sami al-Jumaili, a doctor at
Fallujah Hospital said: "There is not a
single surgeon in Fallujah. We had one ambulance hit by US fire and a
doctor wounded. There are scores of injured civilians in their homes who
we can't move. A 13-year-old child just died in my hands". The
USA-appointed Prime Minister, Iyad Allawi,
responds by accusing Iraqi doctors of exaggerating civilian casualties.
A resident of the city,
Fadri al-Badrani,
tells the Reuters news agency:
"Every minute, hundreds of bombs and shells
are exploding. The north of the city is in flames. Fallujah has become
like hell". Another resident, Farhan
Saleh added: "My kids are hysterical
with fear. They are traumatised by the sound but there is nowhere to
take them".

The magazine,
Christian Science Monitor,
quotes a retired general with connections to the USA military as noting,
This is being done for not only its effect on
Fallujah, but for its demonstration effects...on other places resembling
Fallujah”. In other words, if you resist us, this is what will
happen to you. The use of violence for the purpose of intimidation and
spreading terror is a violation of international law and the
Geneva Conventions.
Television reports mention "phosphorous rounds" without elaborating.
This is a substance that sticks to skin and burns. A hospital doctor,
Kamal Hadeethi, is quoted in the USA
newspaper, Washington Post as saying
"The corpses of the mujaheddin which we
received were burned, and some corpses were melted". People
reported being attacked with a substance that melted their skin, a
reaction consistent with white phosphorous or napalm burns. None of this
is mentioned in the Western media.
As the slaughter continues some members of the the USA-appointed
government, decide to speak out and pull out of the government.
Mohsen Abdel Hamid, the leader of
the Iraqi Islamic Party explains his
reasons: "The American attack on our people
in Fallujah has led and will lead to more killings and genocide without
mercy from the Americans". The
Association of Muslim Scholars calls for a boycott of planned
elections as they will be held "over the
corpses of those killed in Fallujah and the blood of the wounded".
Up to 500 Iraqi troops that had been trained by the USA to "put an Iraqi
face" on the invasion refuse to fight and desert.

The USA-appointed Iraqi government orders journalists working in Iraq
to tow the government line or face legal action. Media were ordered to
"set aside space in your news coverage to
make the position of the Iraqi government, which expresses the
aspirations of most Iraqis, clear". It continued,
"We hope you comply ... otherwise we regret
we will be forced to take all the legal measures to guarantee higher
national interests". Ann Cooper,
director of the USA-based Committee to
Protect Journalists expressed concern at this development:
"It damages the government's credibility in
establishing a free and democratic society". The clampdown
continues with the arrest of Mustafa al-Dulaimi,
a member of the Association of Muslim
Scholars, who had earlier spoken out against the invasion of
Fallujah.

The USA television station,
Fox News,
reported that "US troops also raided a Sunni
mosque in Qaim, near the Syrian border". The report described
the arrests as "retaliation for opposing the
Fallujah offensive". Two Shia clerics associated with
Moqtada al-Sadr have also been
arrested in recent weeks; according to the news agency,
Associated Press,
"both had spoken out against the Fallujah
attack".
Fallujah resident,
Luai Mansur Abd al-Karim, described
conditions in the battered city: "The
majority ... have stayed in the streets, in the open air. They have no
food, no shelter. Life necessities are very little. Humanitarian
organisations cannot reach these families as all roads leading to the
city and its suburbs are closed. Anyone who walks in the streets exposes
his life to danger and his vehicle to being bombed. US forces have
cordoned off the city and all its suburbs. They are conducting group
killings and eliminations in Fallujah and its suburbs. These families
cannot go anywhere."
Another resident,
Rasul Ibrahim,
told the Qatar based TV station,
Al-Jazeera:
"There's no water. People are drinking dirty
water. Children are dying. People are eating flour because there's no
proper food".
- Mother and child
An Iraqi journalist tells
Associated Press:
"The Americans are shooting anything that
moves". To dislodge just one Iraqi sniper, an embedded
journalist with the newspaper, New York Times,
reports that a three storey complex was hit with two 500-pound bombs, 35
155mm artillery shells, 10 120mm shells from tanks and about 30,000
rounds from machine guns and small arms. The building is left a
"smoking ruin". From the television
footage coming out of the city, USA troops "search" buildings by using
grenades and machine gun fire on houses before entering. Every male
found alive is being dragged away, bound and hooded, to detention
centres.
Whole districts have been leveled with many buildings destroyed.
There is no electricity or water. Residents talk of the odour of death
in the streets. Abd al-Hamid Salim,
a volunteer with the relief organisation, Red
Crescent observes that "anyone who
gets injured is likely to die because there's no medicine and they can't
get to doctors. There are snipers everywhere. Go outside and you're
going to get shot."
Abbas Ali, a
doctor reported: "I'm one of the few medical
cadres that survived last Monday from the massacre. We are in a very
tragic situation. Hundreds of dead bodies are spread in the streets.
Even the injured are still there. We cannot transfer them. We cannot do
anything to save them."

The USA President,
George W Bush
and UK Prime Minister, Tony Blair,
continue to say that the military operations in
Fallujah are to
"help Iraqis achieve their liberty and to
defend the security of the world". Fallujah's resisters are
described as "Saddamists" even though the city had a history of defying
the former dictator, Saddam Hussein.
As
Fallujah is battered into
submission, uprisings occur in several places around the country,
including Mosul,
Baiji and
Ramadi.
After a week, the USA declares that
Fallujah is under USA control. Aid convoys are prevented by USA
forces from entering the city, originally because of "security concerns"
then because the USA is providing all assistance required. According to
USA marine, Colonel Mike Shupp,
"there is no need to bring supplies in
because we have supplies of our own for the people".
The USA
appointed Prime Minister, Iyad Allawi,
states that there are "no civilian
casualties" in Fallujah.
Refugees, doctors and other witnesses from the city talk of outbreaks of
typhoid, rotting corpses, thousands of people trapped, the wounded
unable to get medical aid. These claims are mainly ignored by the
Western media. No footage of bodies is shown. In contrast, bodies are
shown in the Dafur region of
Sudan during the same week.

A video by USA television station,
NBC,
shows a USA soldier killing a wounded Iraqi inside a mosque. The soldier
is heard saying that the man was breathing and faking being dead. After
a single shot is fired at the man's head the soldier says
"He's dead now".
This is one of several pieces of footage showing USA soldiers killing
wounded Iraqis in violation of the Geneva
Convention as well as attacks on civilians by aircraft and
helicopters. The NBC footage is
shown in the USA and UK with a story of how the soldier concerned had
been previously shot and is broadcast in the middle of other news items;
the UK television station BBC covers
the story in less than 10 seconds during one broadcast. The actual
shooting is never shown. In the Middle East the footage is shown
uncensored. According to Kevin Sites,
the NBC reporter present at the
time, "the prisoner did not appear to be
armed or threatening in any way".
Kathy Kelly of the peace group,
Voices in the Wilderness, spoke about the images:
"I don't think the US is paying much
attention to the Geneva Conventions any more - that is the problem".
According to reports from newsmen embedded with the USA troops during
the assault launched on 8 November, the shooting may not have been an
isolated incident. Instead, it may have simply been the only one caught
on camera, an illustration of the looser rules of engagement authorised
for the Fallujah offensive. The night
before the assault began, the order came down that troops could shoot
any male on the street between the ages of 15 and 50 if they were viewed
as a security threat, regardless of whether they had a weapon.



Photos. Reuters news agency , Robert Fisk
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Text by Kryss Katsiavriades and Talaat Qureshi .
London.