Monday, March 15, 2010

85,000.

Oct 20th, 20092009-10-21T03:50:27ZM jS, Y | By evilreporterchick | Read more in: Progressive Living

iraqi-children-6

A dispatch from the Evil Reporter Chick….

85,000.

That’s how many Iraqis died in the war between 2004 and 2008. Iraq’s human
rights ministry released that grim number a week ago.

We keep an exact count of the number of Americans who were killed in Iraq
and Afghanistan. Or the number of British troops and other coalition
members. But no one really counts the civilians. The children. The mothers.
The grandmothers. They remain nameless, numbing numbers in headlines. “42
died in suicide bombing.”

“Outlawed groups through terrorist attacks like explosions, assassinations,
kidnappings or forced displacements created these terrible figures, which
represent a huge challenge for the rule of law and for the Iraqi people,”
the ministry said.

“These figures draw a picture about the impact of terrorism and the
violation of natural life in Iraq,” the ministry said in a draft report on
deaths in Iraq.

But no one really knows how many Iraqis died.

The Iraqi government report was compiled with death certificates issued by
the health ministry. What about all those people who never saw home again.
Or whose families never reported a death out of sheer fear.

I know people who have lost loved ones and kept silent. One death in the
family was enough.

Some Iraqis were killed by AK-47 fire, rockets, mortars, and bombs,
otherwise known as improvised explosive devices. Some were abducted, stabbed
or beheaded. In places like Ramadi, such gruesome acts were carried out in
public places and in broad daylight.

The capital of al-Anbar province was once al-Qaida’s haven and an Iraqi
citizen’s hell on Earth — the neighborhood of Melaab was known as “the
heart of darkness.”

I asked Ramadi residents what life was like before the insurgency was
quelled. They glided their right index finger across their throats. The
insurgents brazenly beheaded people in public and distributed videos of the
executions. Think of what kind of fear an ordinary Iraqi lived through. And
still does.

The headlines these days report fewer incidents of violence.

But one bullet, one bomb — is all it takes.

evilreporterchick
AWOP contributor
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