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Full article: The Independent: Depleted uranium in Basra



Dear All,
Sorry to post again, but here is the full article from The Independent.
Sincerely,
Paul Beck

The Independent, Saturday 1 December.
A chamber of horrors so close to the 'Garden of Eden'
In Foreign Parts in Basra, Southern Iraq
Andy Kershaw
01 December 2001
I thought I had a strong stomach - toughened by the minefields and foul
frontline hospitals of Angola, by the handiwork of the death squads in Haiti
and by the wholesale butchery of Rwanda. But I nearly lost my breakfast last
week at the Basrah Maternity and Children's Hospital in southern Iraq.

Dr Amer, the hospital's director, had invited me into a room in which were
displayed colour photographs of what, in cold medical language, are called
"congenital anomalies", but what you and I would better understand as
horrific birth deformities. The images of these babies were head-spinningly
grotesque - and thank God they didn't bring out the real thing, pickled in
formaldehyde. At one point I had to grab hold of the back of a chair to
support my legs.

I won't spare you the details. You should know because - according to the
Iraqis and in all likelihood the World Health Organisation, which is soon to
publish its findings on the spiralling birth defects in southern Iraq - we
are responsible for these obscenities.

During the Gulf war, Britain and the United States pounded the city and its
surroundings with 96,000 depleted-uranium shells. The wretched creatures in
the photographs - for they were scarcely human - are the result, Dr Amer
said.

He guided me past pictures of children born without eyes, without brains.
Another had arrived in the world with only half a head, nothing above the
eyes. Then there was a head with legs, babies without genitalia, a little
girl born with her brain outside her skull and the whatever-it-was whose
eyes were below the level of its nose.

Then the chair-grabbing moment - a photograph of what I can only describe
(inadequately) as a pair of buttocks with a face and two amphibian arms.
Mercifully, none of these babies survived for long.

Depleted uranium has an incubation period in humans of five years. In the
four years from 1991 (the end of the Gulf war) until 1994, the Basrah
Maternity Hospital saw 11 congenital anomalies. Last year there were 221.

Then there is the alarming increase in cases of leukaemia among Basrah
babies lucky enough to have been born with the full complement of limbs and
features in the right place. The hospital treated 15 children with leukaemia
in 1993. In 2000 it was 60. By the end of this year that figure again will
be topped. And so it will go on. Forever.

(Depleted uranium has a half-life of 4.1 billion years. Total disintegration
occurs after 25 billion years, the age of the earth.)

In any other country, in which the vital drugs are available, 95 per cent of
these infant leukaemia cases would be treated successfully. In Basrah, the
figure is 20 per cent. Most heartbreakingly, many children on the road to
recovery go into relapse part way through treatment when the sporadic and
meagre supply of drugs runs out. And then they die.

By the United Nations' own admission 5,000 Iraqi children die every month
because of a shortage of medicines created by sanctions imposed by ... the
United Nations.

Tony Blair, on numerous occasions, has misled Parliament and the country
(perhaps unwittingly) by saying that Saddam Hussein is free to buy all the
medicines Iraq needs under the oil-for-food programme. This is not true. Oil
for food amounts to just 60 cents (40p) per Iraqi per day and everything -
food, education, health care and rebuilding of infrastructure - has to come
out of that. There simply is not enough to go around.

And has Mr Blair heard of the UN Security Council 661 Committee? If he has,
then he keeps quiet about it. The committee was certainly unknown to me
until I toured the shabby hospitals of Basrah.

This committee, which meets in secret in New York and does not publish
minutes, supervises sanctions on Iraq. President Saddam is not free to buy
Iraq's non-military needs on the world market. The country's requirements
have to be submitted to 661 and, often after bureaucratic delay, a judgement
is handed down on what Iraq can and cannot buy. I have obtained a copy of
recent 661 rulings and some of the decisions seem daft if not peevish. "Dual
use" is the most common reason to refuse a purchase, meaning the item
requested could be put to military use.

So how does the 661 committee expect Saddam Hussein to wage war with "beef
extract powder and broth"? Does 661 expect him to turn on the Kurds again by
spraying them with "malt extract"? Or to send his presidential guard back
into Kuwait armed to the teeth with "pencils"? Pencils, you see, according
to 661, contain graphite and therefore could be put to military use. (Tough
on the eager schoolchildren of Basrah who have little with which to write).

Across town at the Basrah Teaching Hospital, the whimsical rulings of 661
are not so comical. Dr Jawad Al-Ali, the director of oncology, trained in
the UK and a member of the Royal College of Physicians, talked of an
"epidemic" of cancers in southern Iraq. "The number of cancer cases is
doubling every year. So is the severity of the cancers, and there has been a
big increase in cancer among the young," he said.

Last week he was struggling to treat 20 cancer patients with "a huge
shortage of chemotherapy drugs" and just two days supply of morphine. "We
are crippled," he said, "by Committee 661." The doctor applied for, but was
denied, life-saving machinery - deep X-ray equipment, blood component
separators, even needles for biopsies. All, said 661, could have military
use.

Tell that to Mofidah Sabah, the mother of four-year-old Yahia. The little
boy has both leukaemia in relapse and neuroblastoma, a cancer behind the eye
that has bulged and twisted his left eyeball in its socket. Ms Sabah travels
miles every day to sit and cuddle her son on his grubby bed. If Yahia lived
in Birmingham, his chances of survival would not be in much doubt. But not
in Basrah. "I'm afraid he will not live very long," Dr Amer whispered.

Ms Sabah said: "I will leave everything to God, but I want God to revenge
those who attacked us." Yahia's illness is not her first brush with tragedy.
She lost 12 members of her family during an Allied bombing in 1991. Her
husband, a soldier, fought in the Gulf war. He is still in the Iraqi army
and has just been reposted, to Qurna, 50 miles north of Basra and among the
contaminated former battlefields. Qurna, according to legend, was the site
of the Garden of Eden.



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