 |
|
The evidence of the power of the U.S. bombing is everywhere
|
NAJAF,
Iraq, April 29 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) - Three weeks
after Saddam Hussein's fall, unexploded cluster bombs still litter the
Iraqi city of Najaf and residents are furious at the United States for
failing to take them away.
"My
sister-in-law's nose was sliced off by shrapnel, and my two-year-old
girl Zahra was hit in the hand and she can no longer move it,"
said Abbas al-Zalami, a father of three, quoted by Agence
France-Presse (AFP).
"Entire
families were killed and now people still get hurt because nobody is
clearing the area. Why did the Americans target civilians? They even
hit ambulances trying to rescue those injured and killed five
medics," he said.
Like
other residents interviewed by AFP, he said a furious air assault
rained down dozens of bombs on the night of March 27, apparently aimed
at a makeshift Iraqi military position nearby.
"I
lost my father, two uncles and a cousin," said Haider Musafer,
22, resting on crutches after taking what he said was 26 pieces of
shrapnel in his right leg.
His
eight-year-old niece Nur, also hit by shrapnel, was wearing a cast on
her right arm.
U.S.
marine Dave Boulanger, patrolling the area in an army jeep, confirmed
that a lot of unexploded ordnance was still in the area.
"It
is taking a while to neutralize them because we are short on
people," he said, declining to identify them as fragments of
cluster bombs or that they were fired by “coalition” forces.
"We
have seen similar scenes all over Iraq, from north to south. There is
so much to take care of. It could take up to two weeks or more to
neutralize the unexploded ordnance here in Najaf," he said.
The
United States has come under criticism from rights groups for its use
of cluster bombs in Afghanistan and other conflicts. The weapons
explode and release hundreds of smaller bomb lets that disperse over a
wide area.
Unexploded
bombs claimed the lives of at least two U.S. soldiers during the Iraq
invasion, and residents in Najaf said that locals were still being
badly injured, often when they drive over the remaining munitions.
"Joint
Iraqi-U.S. patrols pass by the area daily and we beg them to do
something but they say they know and go on," al-Zaimi said.
The
evidence of the power of the bombing is everywhere.
|
|
Two of five young Iraqis injured by a cluster bomb let , detonated while playing soccer |
Charred
Iraqi army trucks and anti-aircraft rocket launchers lie next to burnt
pieces of missiles, and most houses have been riddled with shrapnel
and had their windows blown out.
"A
missile landed in my courtyard but did not explode. I had to remove it
myself and prayed the whole time for it not to go off," said
Sheikh al-Halabseh.
The
danger has exacerbated the anger many already feel over the chaos that
has reigned across the country since Saddam was ousted.
"People
here are afraid to come home because there are still unexploded bombs
inside their houses," said Saad Hatem.
Another man, Zaman al-Bidiwi, said: "Saddam is gone but then
what? Who is taking care of us?"
Late
Monday, April 28, U.S.
President George W. Bush insisted "Iraq can be an example of
peace and prosperity and freedom to the entire Middle East".