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by
April Hurley, MD
in
Baghdad
March
25, 2003
(Filed March 24)
Nine
year old, Rana Adnan needs oxygen for a chest laceration and lung contusion
with a concussion, head laceration, and shrapnel in her left arm.
In
America, the saying goes: If you're not outraged, you're not paying attention.
Nine
year old, Rana Adnan needs oxygen for a chest laceration and lung contusion
with a concussion, head laceration, and shrapnel in her left arm.
In
Bagdhad, at Al Kindi Hospital Emergency, Fatima Abdullah is screaming in
outrage: "Why do you do this to us??!"
Her
8-year-old, Fatehah is dead, two other daughters are on stretchers wounded by a
missile that crushed her uncle's home where they were staying outside Baghdad,
near the Diala Bridge. An extended farming family, they have suffered with
sanctions and economic devastation shrinking their stock of animals to one cow,
a donkey and chickens; they are barely able to feed themselves.
Muhammed,
the four-year-old crying in her arms has cuts from shrapnel and debris
criss-crossing the right side of his face and head, eyelids swollen shut.
Nada
Adman, 13, has an open gash on her right cranium with underlying fracture and a
large, deep shrapnel gauged cut into her upper left thigh.
Nada
Adnan, 13 years old and a student at high school for girls, states "I wish
that God would take Bush. Why did he do this to us? to me?". She has an
open gash on her right cranium with underlying fracture and a large, deep
shrapnel gauged cut into her upper left thigh. She has no narcotic relief and
cries out as aides press guaze into her leg wound. 9 year old, Rana Adnan needs
oxygen for a chest laceration and lung contusion with a concussion, head
laceration, and shrapnel in her left arm.
Nada
Adman, 13, has an open gash on her right cranium with underlying fracture and a
large, deep shrapnel gauged cut into her upper left thigh.
And
then there is Nahla Harbi who was a passenger driving away from Baghdad with
her two year old in her arms when a military school for boys was hit and the
explosion rolled the car fracturing both of her legs. Her child sustained head
injuries.
Less
than 100 meters from Alyermouk Hospital and a school, bombing crushed the foot
of 28 year old man who was walking outside his home.
And
the list keeps going on. A 70 year old man shopping for food for his family now
has a compound fracture of his left upper arm, chest wound through his lung
requiring a chest tube and making answers and complaints more difficult.
He
has rage and opinions, just as the multitude of families do these several days.
How can I explain reasons to them? They know that Bush's Administration is
interested in oil control and that they have no interest in democracy for these
people. Why don't
Americans
know this? Why did we elect this man without human feelings, they ask.
It's
not easy being an American in a Baghdad Emergency room seeing victims and their
families. I wish that George Bush was here with his answers to their outrage.
Nada
Adman, 13, has an open gash on her right cranium with underlying fracture and a
large, deep shrapnel gauged cut into her upper left thigh.
Nada
Adman, 13, has an open gash on her right cranium with underlying fracture and a
large, deep shrapnel gauged cut into her upper left thigh.
April Hurley is a physician
from Santa Rosa, California. She is currently living in Baghdad with the Voices
in the Wilderness' Iraq Peace Team,
a group of international peaceworkers remaining in Iraq through the war, in
order to be a voice for the Iraqi people in the West. The Iraq Peace Team can
be reached at info@vitw.org