Current Headlines

Court quashes student's terrorism conviction In essence Mohammed Atif Siddique was imprisoned for “thought crimes” after he went looking for answers on the Internet More ...
A Young Man's Escape from America From the land of the American Dream and back More ...
Rabbi quits job over City protest To his credit, the rabbi allowed a protest march against excessive profits made in the City of London to start at his synagogue, the oldest in the city. But note how the BBC avoids any mention of the word ‘usury’ More ...
School bombing exposes Obama’s secret war inside Pakistan Seems like the more things ‘change’ the more they stay the same as Obama bans the term “war on terror” and opens a new front in Pakistan More ...
Dehumanisation of the Masses: Population Control and Reduction Wars are being contrived to curtail rising population levels but they may not be enough. Perspectives on some other ways the elite are trying to reduce a growing population, which may make you look at soya in an entirely new light More ...
Paul A. Drockton: Alex Jones and 911 Truth Alex Jones has led his charge to nowhere and thereby diffused the very counter-revolution that could deliver us from this Illuminati nightmare More ...
Iran launches production lines for unmanned planes Meanwhile, a senior air force commander, Gen. Heshmatollah Kasiri, told the official IRNA news agency Monday that Iran would "soon" deploy an air defense system with capabilities matching, or superior to, those of the Russian S-300 system More ...
Paul Joseph Watson: Frightening Taste Of Internet Censorship As Major Free Speech Websites Blocked An ominous preview of what a government regulated world wide web would look like as Infowars and Prison Planet go dark in New Zealand More ...
Henry Makow Ph.D.: Zionists Determine Good and Evil As a Jew, I am tired of Zionists defining the Jewish interest; sick of how Zionists manufacture anti-Semitism to make Jews conform. But I'm thankful for righteous Jews like Richard Goldstone who recognize truth and have the courage to tell it More ...
Gilad Atzmon: Britain You Better Wake Up In the world of British ‘official inquiries’, it is the government that appoints its members and sets its terms of reference. Rather like a criminal suspect being allowed to choose what he should be charged with along with who will be judge and the jury More ...
How to Save the Obama Presidency: Bomb Iran One of the prime advocates behind the Iraq War is now urging Obama to bomb Iran to 'save his presidency'. Disregarding the fact that is unlikely to save anything, it will also likely trigger World War III More ...
The Real World: Tehran Truth is always the first casualty of war. Our kids come next. With fewer jobs to go around, social unrest becomes more certain especially among our nation's youth. And what better way to quell a potential uprising than to send them off to the front line? More ...
US far from winning in Afghanistan: McChrystal The commander of NATO and US forces in Afghanistan, General Stanley McChrystal told reporters in Istanbul on Thursday that he does not believe the allied efforts in Afghanistan have "turned a corner" More ...
Beware the coming war Tel Aviv's recent rhetoric is further proof that Israel cannot exist outside the cycle of perpetual war, writes Ramzy Baroud More ...
Printer friendly version Posted 28/07/2004 Email this article to a friend

Baghdad is a city that reeks with the stench of the dead

Robert Fisk – The Independent July 28, 2004

The smell of the dead pours into the street through the air-conditioning ducts. Hot, sweet, overwhelming. Inside the Baghdad morgue, there are so many corpses that the fridges are overflowing. The dead are on the floor. Dozens of them. Outside, in the 46C (114F) heat, Qadum Ganawi tells me how his brother Hassan was murdered.

“He was bringing supper home for our family in Palestine Street but he never reached our home. Then we got a phone call saying we could have him back if we paid $50,000 (£27,000). We didn’t have $50,000. So we sold part of our home and many of our things and we borrowed $15,000 and we paid over the money to a man who was wearing a keffiyeh scarf round his head.

“Then we got another call, telling us that Hassan was at the Saidiyeh police station. He was. He was blindfolded and gagged and he had two bullets in his head. They had taken our money and then they had killed him”.

There is a wail of grief from the yard behind us where 50 people are waiting in the shade of the Baghdad mortuary wall. There are wooden coffins in the street, stacked against the wall, lying on the pavement.

Old men – fathers and uncles – are padding them with grease proof paper. When the bodies are released, they will be taken to the mosque and then buried in shrouds. There are a few women. Most stare at the intruding foreigner with something approaching venom. The statistics of violent death in Baghdad are now beyond shame. Almost a year ago, there were sometimes 400 violent deaths a month. This in itself was a fearful number to follow the Anglo-American invasion of Iraq. But in the first 10 days of this July alone, the corpses of 215 men and women were brought to the Baghdad mortuary, almost all of them dead from gunshot wounds. In the second 10 days of this month, the bodies of a further 291 arrived. A total of 506 violent deaths in under three weeks in Baghdad alone. Even Iraqi officials here shake their heads in disbelief. “New Iraq” under its new American appointed Prime Minister is more violent than ever.

Qadum Ganawi puts his hand on my arm. “Listen”, he says. “My brother only had two tiny children. One is only a year old. We have sold our house and borrowed $15,000. How can we ever pay this back? And we have nothing for it but the grief of losing my dear brother.

“He was a car importer so they thought he was rich. He wasn’t. And you know his wife is Syrian. She want to Syria for a holiday with the two babies. She is ther now. She doesn’t know what has happened to her husband.”

Trucks are arriving in the street besides us, a pick-up and a small lorry with corpses for autopsy. Tony Blair says it is safer here. He is wrong. Every month is a massacre in Baghdad. Thieves, rapists, looters, American troops at checkpoints and on convoys, revenge killers, insurgents, they are shooting down the people of this city faster than ever.

One man was shot dead by a US soldier as he overtook their convoy on the way to his Baghdad wedding. We found out only because his marriage was to have been celebrated in a hotel occupied by journalists. Another death I discovered only when an old Iraqi friend called on me last week. He wanted me to help him leave Iraq. Quickly. Now.

“I work for the Americans at the airport but I think I’m done for if I stay.” Why? “Because my uncle worked at the airport for the Americans, just like me. My uncle was Abdullah Mohi. He was driving home the other night but they stopped him a hundred metres from his house. Then they took a knife and cut his throat. We found him drenched in blood at the steering wheel.” Abbas looks at me with dead eyes. “Should I go to Jordan? Help me”

At the mortuary, a big, tall man, Amr Daher, walks up to me. “They killed one of our tribal leaders from the Dulaimi tribe,” he says. “This morning, right in the middle of Al-Kut Square, just a couple of hours ago”. Selman Hassan Salume was driving with his two teenage sons when three gunmen came alongside in a car and shot him dead. Both his sons were wounded, one seriously.

Hospital records tell only part of the story. In the blazing heat of an Iraqi summer, some families bury their dead without notifying the authorities. Some remain unidentified for ever, unclaimed. The Americans bring in corpses. When they do there are no autopsies. The morticians will not say why. But the Ministry of Health has told doctors there should be no autopsies in these cases because the Americans will have already performed the operation.

Not long ago, six corpses arrived at the Baghdad mortuary after being brought in by US forces. Three were unidentified. Three had names but their families could not be found. All had suffered, according to the American records, “traumatic wounds to the head”, the normal phrase for gunshot wounds. There were no autopsies. Death is now so routine even the most tragic of deaths becomes a footnote. A US tank collides with a bus north of Baghdad. Seven civilians are killed. The Americans agree to open an investigation. It makes scarcely a paragraph in the local press. Four days ago, a US M1A1 Abrams crossing the motorway at Abu Ghraib collided with a car carrying two girls and their mother, all of whom were crushed to death. It did not even make the news in Baghdad.

No wonder the occupying powers – or the “international forces” as we must now call them – steadfastly refuse to reveal the statistics of Iraqi dead, only their own.
Even the deaths we do not know about during the past 36 hours make shocking reading. At Mahmudiyah, south of Baghdad, gunmen killed two Iraqi police officers travelling to their station. In Kirkuk, an Iraqi policeman, Luay Abdullah, was shot as he waited for a lift home after guarding an oil pipeline. A Kurdish woman and her two children were killen when someone sprayed their home in Kirkuk with gunfire. A Kurdish peshmerga guerrilla was murdered in a drive-by shooting.

A former government official was killed in Baghdad. Then yesterday afternoon, a senior civil servant at the Iraqi Interior Ministry in Baghdad was shot dead. In the town of Buhriz, hours of fighting between insurgents and US troops left 15 dead, according to the Americans. All, they said, were gunmen, although it almost always transpires that civilians are among the dead in such battles.

American documents say insurgent groups “have become more sophisticated and may be co-ordinating their anti-coalition efforts, posing an even more significan threat”. There is an increase in drive-by shootings. And, a chilling remark this, for all would-be travellers in and out of Baghdad, the Americans believe “recent attacks on air assets suggest that all types of aircraft, civilian, fixed-wing and military … are seen as potential targets of opportunity”.

So the war is getting worse. The casualties are growing by the week. And Mr Blair thinks Iraq is safer.

Printer friendly version Email this article to a friend

Last updated 31/07/2004

Homepage

Essential Reading for Newer Readers

The Unspeakable Truth of 9/11 The 'dots' you are not supposed to connect... More ...
Was Timothy McVeigh Really Executed? Despite what the mainstream media may say, there are indications aplenty that Timothy McVeigh was NOT executed More ...
Norwegian politician: Planet X is Incoming 2.000.000 To Go Underground This partially ties in with information from a very reliable psychic friend More ...
Rixon Stewart: The Advent of the Anti-Christ A few words on the market meltdown and how it may assist the debut of a truly sinister figure More ...
Affidavit of Richard Tomlinson "I firmly believe that there exist documents held by the British Secret Intelligence Service (MI6) that would yield important new evidence into the cause and circumstances leading to the death of the Princess of Wales." More ...
The Doors of Perception and the Language of Spin We've all heard the term "spin", but what exactly does it mean. Tim O'Shea investigates More ...
The Essene Gospel of Peace III The concluding part of what many think are the authentic words of Christ More ...
"WIPED OFF THE MAP" - The Rumor of the Century How President Ahmadinejad's words were mistranslated and deliberately distorted. So that the term "wiped off the map" has now become synonymous with the Iranian leader’s attitude to Israel – even though he never uttered those words More ...
Smoking Mirrors: Magic Thermite and the 9/11 Fairytale The evidence is in and it’s irrefutable: scientists have discovered traces of hi-tech explosives in the WTC debris. Which means the UK/US/Israel will have to stage another event on the scale of 9/11 to counter the brushfire this report will ignite More ...
Important Announcement: General Ivashov: “International terrorism does not exist” Gen. Leonid Ivashov was Chief of Staff of Russian armed forces when the 9/11 attacks took place, but he says, they weren't carried out by Osama or al-Qaeeda. The most likely culprits, says the General, were transnational mafias and international oligarchs More ...
An Intelligence Insider Speaks Out: The true inside facts about the 7/7 London bombings What this website has long suspected has been confirmed. James Casbolt, himself a former MI6 operative, gets the inside story from a disaffected member of British Intelligence on who was really behind the 7/7 bombings and why More ...
Something Evil This Way Comes? We are not being told everything about the London terror attacks and, just like 9/11, contradictions and anomalies are appearing in the official account. We look back and try to fathom what really happened? More ...