Low Graphics Site
White bar
Daily SectionMarker

Misc SectionMarker

Horoscope Recipes Weekly SectionMarker

Weekly SectionMarker

Pakistan's Internet Magazine
Herald
Dawn GroupMarker

Archive, Search, Feedback & HelpMarker

Dawn Classified



FrontPage National International Local Business KSE Forex Sports Editorial Opinion Letters Features Today's Cartoon TV Guide Cowasjee Ayaz Irfan Hussain Review Dawn Magazine Young World Images Dawn Group Subscription To Advertise

DINA
Previous Story DAWN - the Internet Edition Next Story

April 2, 2003 Wednesday Muharram 29, 1424





Orphaned kids weep in packed hospital


HILLA (Iraq), April 1: At a small hospital here overwhelmed by hundreds of injured civilians, two bewildered children cried silently as they tried to comfort their screaming infant sister. Their parents were just killed in US-British bombing.

With tears running down his cheeks, a brave nine-year-old Ahmad hugged his young sister. His little brother nervously scratched an orange against his teeth and caressed the crying baby’s head.

Holding onto one another in the hallway, the children drew little attention in a hospital overwhelmed with bleeding children, wailing women and moaning elderly people.

The three were orphaned after a bombing outside this town 80 kilometres south of Baghdad, which a hospital official said killed 33 civilians, most of them women and children, and wounded about 400 others.

The three children’s neighbour, 23-year-old Mohammad Karim, explained that when residents “saw the warplanes flying at very low altitude, they rushed out of their homes toward the nearby plantation fields.”

“Then it started raining cluster bombs everywhere,” he said, his voice rising in anger. “People were being slaughtered like sheep.”

Karim, sitting next to the bed of his brother who suffered critical wounds to the throat, said the three children’s “father and mother were killed instantly and taken to the hospital”.

“When we came back to the neighbourhood after the raid, we were completely stunned by the sight of three children terrified to death,” he said.

“The eldest boy started screaming: ‘Where is my mother, where is my father?’” he said. “But we didn’t know what to tell him, so we just carried the three children to the hospital.”

The bombing Tuesday was described as “veritable horror” by the spokesman for the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) in Baghdad.

“Our four-member team went to Hilla hospital south of Baghdad, and what it saw there was a veritable horror. There were dozens of smashed corpses,” Roland Huguenin-Benjamin told AFP.

At the hospital, many children lay wounded under blankets on the floor due to a shortage of beds. In the back yard, elderly men and women sat bearing blood-stained bandages.

Salima Karrar Barhan, 33, was wounded in her arms, legs and head. She lay on a narrow bed between her nine-year-old son who was wounded in the stomach and her six-year-old daughter who had bandages on her legs, clutching them so they would not fall off.

“Where is my husband? Where is my husband? He needs to take care of the children because I can’t take it anymore. Please find him,” she said plaintively.

At the scene of the bombing, dozens of what seemed to be parts of cluster bombs equipped with small parachutes were peppered over a large area, an AFP correspondent at the site said.—AFP






Previous Story Top of Page Next Story

Seprater
Contributions
Privacy Policy
© DAWN Group of Newspapers, 2005