War crimes in Iraq? U.S. must pay
By
John Catalinotto
Published May 4, 2005 5:07 PM
Belgian doctors carried out five operations
on a young Iraqi woman to repair leg wounds caused by a U.S. cluster bomb.
Wanting to add some justice to this humanitarian act, the doctors handed a bill
for 51,570 euros ($66,650) to the U.S. Embassy in Brussels on April
28.
The young woman, Hiba Kassim, was wounded in her leg, hip and abdomen
by the bomb during the U.S. invasion two years ago. The same bomb killed her
brother. The doctors, from Medical Aid for the Third World (MATW), brought
Kassim to Belgium in 2004 in an attempt to save her ankle. At this time she is
able to walk, but with a limp.
In the letter to the U.S. Embassy
demanding payment, Dr. Bert de Belder of MATW wrote April 25:
“Hiba
is aware of the fact that war and occupation continue to make life very hard for
her family, neighbors and friends. But this young girl, who turned 15 just last
week, is determined to return to her country. She intends to study hard and
hopes to become a doctor and serve her people.
“Hiba is also
convinced of the fact that the U.S. government is the prime responsible for her
people’s suffering, and the sole responsible for her own, personal
suffering.
“We hold the U.S. government accountable ... First, U.S.
troops hit Hiba with a cluster bomb, while, according to Inter national Humani
tarian Law, targeting civilians in an international armed conflict is
prohibited, as is the use of cluster bombs or ammunition in civilian
areas.
“Second, Hiba was not able to get proper medical care, while
according to the Fourth Geneva Convention (Articles 50, 55 and 56), the
occupying power has the duty of ensuring the medical supplies of the population
and of ensuring and maintaining the medical and hospital establishments and
services in the occupied territory.
“As a humanitarian agency, we
decided to step in and try, to the best of our ability, to provide Hiba Kassim
with the care and the opportunities that the U.S. occupation of her country
denied her. But we promised to Hiba and to the broad group of supporters and
sympathizers—including Olympic medalist and multiple world and Euro pean
judo champion Gella Vandecaveye — that we would send the bill to the U.S.
government.”
Dr. Geert van Moorter, who spoke in the U.S. last year
of his experiences in Iraq, accompanied Kassim to Amman, Jordan, where her
father met her.
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