Robert Fisk: The Children of Fallujah - Sayef's story
Robert Fisk: The Children of Fallujah - Sayef's storySpecial Report day one: The phosphorus shells that devastated this city were fired in 2004. But are the victims of America's dirty war still being born?
Wednesday 25 April 2012
For little Sayef, there will be no Arab Spring. He lies, just 14 months old, on a small red blanket cushioned by a cheap mattress on the floor, occasionally crying, his head twice the size it should be, blind and paralysed. Sayeffedin Abdulaziz Mohamed his full name has a kind face in his outsized head and they say he smiles when other children visit and when Iraqi families and neighbours come into the room.
But he will never know the history of the world around him, never enjoy the freedoms of a new Middle East. He can move only his hands and take only bottled milk because he cannot swallow. He is already almost too heavy for his father to carry. He lives in a prison whose doors will remain forever closed.
It's as difficult to write this kind of report as it is to understand the courage of his family. Many of the Fallujah families whose children have been born with what doctors call "congenital birth anomalies" prefer to keep their doors closed to strangers, regarding their children as a mark of personal shame rather than possible proof that something terrible took place here after the two great American battles against insurgents in the city in 2004, and another conflict in 2007.
After at first denying the use of phosphorous shells during the second battle of Fallujah, US forces later admitted that they had fired the munitions against buildings in the city. Independent reports have spoken of a birth-defect rate in Fallujah far higher than other areas of Iraq, let alone other Arab countries. No one, of course, can produce cast-iron evidence that American munitions have caused the tragedy of Fallujah's children.
MORE...
http://www.independent.co.uk/opinion/commentators/fisk/robert-fisk-the-children-of-fallujah--sayefs-story-7675977.html
proverbialwisdom
(4,959 posts)TITLE: THE TINY VICTIMS OF DESERT STORM - Has Our Country Abandoned Them?
PUBLICATION: LIFE Magazine
PRINT DATE: November 1995
The War's Littlest Victim Daily News Exclusive: He Was Exposed To Depleted Uranium. His Daughter May Be Paying The Price.
BY JUAN GONZALEZ
Wednesday, September 29, 2004
IN EARLY SEPTEMBER 2003, Army National Guard Spec. Gerard Darren Matthew was sent home from Iraq, stricken by a sudden illness.
One side of Matthew's face would swell up each morning. He had constant migraine headaches, blurred vision, blackouts and a burning sensation whenever he urinated.
The Army transferred him to Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington for further tests, but doctors there could not explain what was wrong.
Shortly after his return, his wife, Janice, became pregnant. On June 29, she gave birth to a baby girl, Victoria Claudette.
More at link.
proverbialwisdom
(4,959 posts)More here: http://www.envirosagainstwar.org/know/read.php?itemid=11812
April 2011 issue The American Conservative magazine
Kelley Beaucar Vlahos is a Washington, D.C.-based freelance reporter and a columnist for Antiwar.com.
...Upon touring a clinic in Fallujah in March of last year, the BBCs John Simpson reported, we were given details of dozens upon dozens of cases of children with serious birth defects.
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But there is nothing simple about this issue. On one hand, it is widely accepted among scientists, doctors, and aid workers that war is to blame. The presence of so much expended weaponry, waste and rubble, massive burn pits on U.S. bases, and oil fires has left a toxic legacy that is poisoning the air, the water, and the soil in Iraq. Add highly controversial armaments that the U.S. has only hinted at using in this warsuch as depleted uraniumand you get a potentially radioactive landscape giving rise to doomed children and stillborn babies.
I think we have destroyed Iraq, says Dr. Adil Shamoo, a biochemist at the University of Maryland who specializes in medical ethics and foreign policy. Shamoo, an Iraqi-American, believes its just common sense to link Iraqs troubled health situation to the relentless bombing of its towns and cities and the polluted aftermath of fighting and occupation.
The Department of Defense disagrees, rejecting claims that the military is to blame for chronic illnesses, birth defects, and high rates of cancer among the local population and its own service members exposed to the same elements in theater. (DoD officials did not return calls and e-mails to respond to the specific charges made in this story.)
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This is a serious public health crisis that needs global attention. We need independent and unbiased research into the possible causes of this epidemic, declared American environmental toxicologist Mazhgan Savabieasfahani, co-author of the most recent report on birth defects in Fallujah.
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In December, a report in the International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health declared ...
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Another recent article, Cancer, Infant Mortality and Birth Sex-Ratio in Fallujah, Iraq 20052009, published in the International Journal of Environmental and Public Health last July...
More at link.
madrchsod
(58,162 posts)sad sally
(2,627 posts)Were leaving behind a sovereign, stable and self-reliant Iraq, with a representative government that was elected by its people. President Barack Obama, Fort Bragg, N.C., December 2011
You will leave with great pride lasting pride. Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta to U.S. troops, December 2011
Ive written repeatedly about the terrible dictatorship and lasting sectarian violence Washington left in Iraq after the troop withdrawal of December 2011. Contrary to the lies of these indecent politicians, the enduring effects of the illegal U.S. war in Iraq are still causing havoc and bloodshed throughout the country. Iraq is neither secure, nor is it a democracy as was promised by warmongers in Washington.
A new Congressional Research Service report takes a look at post-withdrawal Iraq and at one point lists the most high-profile incidents of sectarian violence:
On February 7, 2012, the AQ-I affiliate Islamic State of Iraq claimed responsibility for two of the deadliest attacks on Shiites since the U.S. withdrawalon January 5 and January 14, 2012, which killed 78 and 53 Shiite pilgrims, respectively. In one of the most complex attacks in recent months, on February 23, 2012, bombings in 12 Iraqi cities killed over 50 persons; based on the method and scope of the attacks, Iraqi observers attributed the attacks to AQ-I. AQ-I claimed responsibility for a broad series of attacksencompassing six citieson March 20, 2012; over 40 persons were killed. Another spate of attacks took place in Baghdad and Kirkuk on April 19, 2012, killing about 36 persons.