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  • The Faces Of Iraqis Are Hard To Find

    THE FACES OF IRAQIS ARE HARD TO FIND
    By Kate Rogers Gessert

    The Register-Guard, OR
    June 7 2007

    Last month in Iraq, 126 U.S. soldiers, five soldiers from Great Britain
    and other countries, and about 2,770 Iraqi civilians were killed,
    according to figures collected by Iraq Body Count. In newspapers and
    on Web sites, we read about American casualties, both the dead and the
    wounded - Americans such as Sgt. Will Glass, the wounded young soldier
    whose story appeared in The Register-Guard on Memorial Day weekend.

    But it is difficult to find news stories that focus on individual Iraqi
    casualties. Personal details drop out when only a few reporters are
    working on the dangerous streets of Iraq, many Iraqis are afraid to
    talk with reporters, and large-scale carnage is occurring. For example,
    although 652 Iraqi civilians were killed in the first week of May,
    news reports included the names of just 14, according to Iraq Body
    Count records (www .iraqbodycount.org).

    Yet only by hearing about the lives and deaths of people who are dying,
    by seeing the faces of Iraqis as well as Americans, can we begin to
    really understand what is happening.

    During the past month, I've read both The Register-Guard and the
    Internet sites of a broad range of international media, searching for
    news of Iraqi civilian casualties of war. I learned two things. Even
    on the Internet, there is little except casualty counts. I had to
    dig hard to find anything.

    And in The Register-Guard, there is more than I realized, though it
    is easy to overlook. Most days, on page 2 of the main news section,
    there are composite articles about Iraq. Although these articles
    focus on political and military developments and general descriptions
    of the preceding day's violence, they sometimes include, whether in
    paragraph seven or 12, glimpses of Iraqi civilians who have died.

    You might remember Sami Hussein (Register-Guard, May 23) who lost her
    5-year-old son in a Baghdad market bombing, or Saif Fakhry, a TV news
    cameraman, killed while he walked to the mosque with his pregnant wife
    (Register-Guard, June 1).

    Looking at international media, I've found more glimpses to add to
    the shadowy picture of Iraqi civilian casualties of May 2007.

    ~U May 1: Nejim Mohammed Hussein, a Kirkuk blacksmith, refused to
    cooperate with militants. They burned him alive in his car in front
    of his blacksmith's shop (Agence France Presse).

    ~U May 7: Jaafar al-Anbaki and his wife taught in the same elementary
    school in Diyala province. Gunmen stormed the school and executed
    the two teachers in front of their students and colleagues (Voices
    of Iraq).

    ~U May 7: A roadside bomb exploded beside a U.S. patrol in Baghdad.

    The soldiers started firing, and their bullets pierced the walls of a
    nearby house and killed Zaruhi Karabet, a 79-year-old Armenian Iraqi
    woman who lived inside (Karabakh Open).

    ~U May 8: According to Iraqi security sources, shots were fired at a
    U.S. helicopter in al-Nada village in Diyala province, and soldiers
    in the helicopter returned fire, hitting Al-Saada elementary school.

    Witnesses said six children were killed and six others wounded (Radio
    Free Europe/Radio Liberty).

    ~U May 23: Samarra is a city of 300,000 where the Iraqi government
    and the U.S. military have imposed a blockade since May 6, when a
    suicide bomber killed a dozen police officers. No vehicles are allowed
    into the city; it is difficult for residents to find food, water and
    medical supplies. According to a doctor in Samarra's largest hospital,
    at least 10 people, including seven babies, have died because of a
    lack of power for incubators and other medical equipment. Doctors for
    Iraq has called for an end to the blockade, which it calls "collective
    punishment" (Inter Press Service).

    ~U May 27: Khalil al-Zahawi, known as Iraq's "sheikh of calligraphers,"
    trained practitioners throughout the Middle East in classical Arabic
    calligraphy. Gunmen pulled him from his car outside his Baghdad house
    and shot him (BBC).

    ~U May 30: Thirty-one-year-old Abdul Rahman al-Isawi lived with his
    family in Amiriyat-al-Fallujah and worked as a freelance reporter.

    Late at night, "gunmen entered his house and dragged him with his
    father and brother to a nearby orchard, where they shot them," said
    Mohammed Hussein, al-Isawi's cousin. Five other family members also
    died at the hands of the gunmen. Two other Iraqi journalists also
    were killed: in Kirkuk, Mahmoud Hakim Mustafa, editor of Hawadith
    newspaper, and in Amara, Nazar Abdul Wahid, a 38-year-old father of
    three who was on his way to a journalism workshop (Reuters).

    These are 33 Iraqi civilians among the 2,770 who died last month. May
    they all rest in peace.

    Kate Rogers Gessert, a writer and teacher, wrote "Undercovered,"
    a digest of news related to war, politics and the environment, for
    Eugene Weekly from 2001 to 2005.

    http://www.registerguard.com/news/2007/06/0 7/ed.col.gessert.0607.p1.php?section=opinion
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