2013/04/02
Felicity Arbuthnot: Liberating Iraqis, Limb by Limb, Life by Life, Home by Home!
Why should we hear about body bags and deaths, I mean, it's not relevant, so why waste my beautiful mind on something like that. Former First Lady, Barbara Bush, Good Morning America, 18th March 2003. In these days of the tenth anniversary of the illegal invasion, and near destruction of Iraq, answers are owed not alone for the dead, but to the cancer stricken, the deformed, to their parents, their siblings and all Iraqis. They were left with a land, poisoned by depleted uranium in 1991, the burden ever building over twelve more years of illegal US and UK bombings, then the enormity of 2003. Fallujah's victims have rightly come under medical and media scrutiny, since the US military onslaught of April and November 2004, but throughout Iraq, there have been no reports of areas unaffected. In context, Dahr Jamail writes from Fallujah, Official Iraqi government statistics show that, prior to the outbreak of the First Gulf War in 1991, the rate of cancer cases in Iraq, was 40 out of 100,000 people. By 1995, it had increased to 40 out of 100,000 people. By 1995, it had increased to 800 out of 100,000 people, and by 2005, it had doubled to at least 1,600 out of 100,000 people. Current estimates show the increasing trend continuing. As shocked as these statistics are, due to a lack of adequate documentation, research and reporting of cases, the actual rate of cancer, and other diseases, is likely to be much higher, than even these figures suggest. He also cites a dramatic jump in miscarriages and premature births, particularly in areas where heavy US military operations occurred, as in Fallujah. Jamail cites the study by Dr Chris Busby, Malak Hamdan and Entesar Ariabi: Cancer, Infant Mortality and Birth Sex Ration in Fallujah, Iraq 2005-2009. Of it, Dr Busby's opinion was, that the Fallujah health crisis represented the highest rate of genetic damage in any population ever studied. There were numerous reports, during the 2004 April and November-December, US assaults on Fallujah of, in addition to DU, three times unanimously designated a weapon of mass destruction by UN Sub Committees, illegal, experimental chemical weapons and napalm being used in the decimation of this city of about three hundred thousand people. After the second assault, Dr Saleh Hussein Iswawi of the Fallujah General Hospital told the BBC, About sixty to seventy percent of homes and buildings, are completely crushed and damaged, and not ready to inhabit.
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