Rocket Blast Near Baghdad Devastates an Iraqi Family (Los Angeles Times, April 2, 2003, page A9).
The attack on Jisser Diala village
kills 14 relatives and hurts nine others. A
12-year-old boy loses his arms
and is orphaned.
By Sergei L. Loiko
Times Staff Writer
April 2, 2003
BAGHDAD -- The boy wrinkles his
nose and looks from right to left refusing to believe what he sees: two
white-bandaged stumps like white
wings instead of his arms. Ali
Ismail, 12, doesn't recall the rocket that destroyed his house and killed
most of his extended family. Nor does he fully
understand that he is in a hospital,
hours after doctors saved his life.
A distant relative bends over to
scratch his nose. "Do you want something to eat or some water to drink?"
she asks. "No," said the boy, "I want my
mum. When will she come?"
The rocket blast Sunday night shattered
the village of Jisser Diala on the southern outskirts of Baghdad where
24 members of Ali's family lived in a
compound of four houses and a
number of smaller shacks and cabins. Survivors said 14 of Ali's relatives
-- his mother, father, brother, cousins,
aunts and uncles -- were killed
and nine others injured. Ali's cousin Thumer Mahsin, 31, was unscathed
and supervised the burials.
On Tuesday, Mahsin, a farmer, returned
to what used to be his house, now just piles of rubble. Mahsin walked around,
picked up and examined a
toy truck, a shoe, a cabinet drawer.
He told a reporter he was not sure where he would sleep.
"They bomb this area every day,"
Mahsin said. "I don't know why they do it. But it went on every day, night
and day too. And we got used to it.
We slept in our houses every night.
And it fell on Sunday night. There was this huge light, and the earth jumped
under the house. I jumped up and
then fell and then I felt something
heavy lying on top of me, a piece of ceiling or something. When I crawled
out, smoke was everywhere. You
couldn't see a thing."
Then neighbors came with torches and water from the nearby canal and put out the fires and brought out his dead and injured relatives, he said.
Kerim Jasem, 42, a neighboring
farmer, recalled that all the bodies they removed were covered with blood
and dust. "It was difficult to tell who
was alive and who was dead."
U.S. officers say they don't target civilians but acknowledge that some will be killed -- in part because Iraq has put weapons in population centers.
Jasem insisted that there is no
military target in the vicinity. But close by, on the other side of a small
canal, there was an antiaircraft battery, barely
visible through the thick black
smoke from oil fires that encircle the capital. As he talked, surrounded
by his six grown sons, the guns began firing.
Two bombs fell about 700 yards
away, but nobody ducked. They are all used to it by now.
"It is nothing," said Jasem. "Today is quiet. Sunday was a bad day. They bombed all day."
Asked why they don't move to safety,
Jasem gave a sad chuckle. "It is our land. If Allah decides that we should
die here like our neighbors, then
we will die. If the Americans
come here, we will fight them."
The sense of war is vivid in the
villages outside the capital. Roads are empty of vehicles, and few civilians
move about among the soldiers and other
loyalists in green military robes.
The vast open fields have numerous fortifications with antiaircraft guns
and large-caliber machine-gun
emplacements.
The threat of violence is everywhere.
On the road back to Baghdad, two old sedans blocked the way and several
villagers with Kalashnikovs
stopped a reporter's car. They
pointed the loaded rifles through the car windows, almost touching a passenger's
forehead. Their eyes were full of
hatred. The youngest looked barely
16.
One of the men asked if there were Americans in the car. Told no, he looked dubious, then slightly relaxed.
"My sons and I will die here, but
not let Americans into the city," said the oldest man. Then he barked something
to the others and they moved the
blockade, allowing the car to
go on to Baghdad, where the planes again were in the skies.
Copyright 2003 Los Angeles Times