LEES/GEEF JE BEMERKINGEN
19 slachroffers van oorlogsmisdaden begaan door USA-troepen gedurende de recente oorlog in Irak, dienen een klacht in op basis van de genocidewet tegen generaal Tommy Franks.
Name: Dewitte Harrie E-mail:
harrie.dewitte@gvhv.be
City: Genk Country: Belgium
Homepage: Date: 14-Jul-2003 13:29:06
Message:Dit is een zeer aangrijpende weergave wat er in
werkelijkheid gebeurt. Ik was in het ziekenhuis
toen deze bewuste ambulance beschoten werd. Dr.
Harrie Dewitte.
Marc
Ik heb je animatie vandaag tijdens mijn raadpleging 4 keer afgespeeld voor
Marokkaanse patiënten om hen te motiveren voor de petitie à 1
euro voor proces Franks. Dat hielp heel goed. Vooral die erin verwerkte foto's
van de slachtoffers maken veel indruk; Een vrouw zei 'Ik vind dat geweldig
wat jullie voor onze mensen doen'.
Er moeten technische middelen zijn om dat af en toe via PC op een monitor
in de wachtzaal af te spelen.
kdsch
kris
Madison USA
by jb
Email: Jbrillion (at) hotmail.com (unverified!) 08 Jul 2003
Dropped over a month ago. Stay current. It's nuts like htis lawyer that are
the reason the US wants nothing to do with the ICC. US Should pull out of
western Europe. we need the troops elsewhere anyway. Notice how nervous the
German government got when Rumsfeld mused about closing many of the German
Bases? The Communists would love to see us leave. It's the only way the European
economy goes deep enough in the crapper for them to have the remotest chance
for their precious little
class war.
Austin USAca
nice try belgium
by not a leftist 4:10pm Thu Jul 3 '03
Belgium quickly wised up
when Rumsfeld suggested that funding for a new NATO headquarters might not
go ahead as planned if Belgium continued to act stupid. Nice Euro-socialists.
Now play nice and let the US make the world a safer place.
Thankfully, most countries are falling in line when it comes to granting US
service members immunity from the unconstitutional ICC as well. Money talks
as they say.
Atlanta USA
Get real
by George 12:33pm Thu Jul 3 '03
I seem to recall that the
US military warned the Iraqis not to approach their positions with ambulances.
I also remember that the reason is that the Iraqis near the beginning of this
conflict used an ambulance to get close to a US military column and then blew
themselves up trying to kill those US soldiers.
GOD FORBID
by Shades 11:07pm Thu Jul 3 '03
God Forbid, the Iraqis
use Ambulances to get people with life threatening conditions to Hospitals.
No wait we destroyed those.
I don't remember hearing a damn thing about "coalition" forces saying
anything about not using Ambulances. I watched several international news
channels covering the war, and I didn't hear a damn thing about that one.
Oh yeah you were listening to the Fox Newsance channel I forgot about their,
"fair and balanced" reporting. You must be right.
So what you are saying is: Fuck the sick and dying, don't mess with our checkpoints".
Sounds like Right Wing imperialist crap to me. Kudos on trying to misrepresent
the truth.
Shades limited sources
by Kelly Martin 6:30am Fri Jul 4 '03
considering this bizarre
claim by Shades that hospitals were destroyed by US troops in Iraq I have
to wonder where his new sources came from.
My suspicion was Shades limited his viewing to "Bagdad Bob," a very
questionable provider of facts.
Why are hospitals bombed?
by War and Law League 8:48am Fri Jul 4 '03 Why are hospitals bombed?
By the War and Law League
The Department of Defense ought to explain why hospitals have been subject
to attack despite the prohibition against such attacks in the Geneva Convention
of 1949. At least four were hit recently in Iraq. U.S. bombs had also struck
hospitals in Afghanistan, Yugoslavia, and Iraq in the 1990s.
"It is inhumane beyond belief to bomb hospitals, whose staff are devoted
to the healing of the sick and injured, and thereby to kill the sick and injured,"
said Dr. Helen Caldicott, Australian pediatrician, peace activist, and founding
member and former president of Physicians for Social Responsibility. Other
doctors, from the U.S., also had comments (quoted below). At the University
of California, San Francisco, 364 doctors, staff members, medical students,
etc. signed a statement protesting the attack on Iraq generally. And a group
of Belgian physicians appealed for help to alleviate a "humanitarian
catastrophe."
Article 18 of the "Convention (IV) relative to the Protection of Civilian
Persons in Time of War," a U.S.-approved treaty, says, "Civilian
hospitals organized to give care to the wounded and sick, the infirm and maternity
cases, may in no circumstances be the object of attack but shall at all times
be respected and protected by the Parties to the conflict." Article 25
of The Hague Convention on laws of war on land (1907), another U.S. treaty,
forbids attacking or bombarding any "buildings which are undefended."
Under the Constitution, Article 6, treaties are federal law.
Summary of the attacks
Associated Press reported on March 30 that a childrens hospital in Rutbah,
in Iraqs western desert, had been destroyed by bombs on March 28. Then
on April 3 Reuters said that U.S. aircraft bombed a Red Crescent maternity
hospital in Baghdad the day before along with other civilian buildings, killing
several people and wounding at least 25.
The number of casualties in the first attack was not reported. A source at
the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies said
three were killed and 27 injured in the latter attack; it had been directed
at a nearby building, but the roof of the maternity hospital collapsed and
windows were smashed. It was part of a compound including Iraqi Red Crescent
headquarters, fair grounds, and a surgical hospital. Evidently the hospital
had been mostly evacuated some days earlier. Reports differed. An official
Iraqi source said nine women died. Arabic News placed the toll at 30 killed,
215 wounded.
U.S. forces stormed a hospital in Nasiriya on April 1 and 2 and later showed
evidence that it had been illegally used by Iraq for military purposes. But
the Pentagon did not explain how the hospital could be legally attacked in
the first place.
CARE reported April 15 that shells had directly hit the large Al Yarmuk Hospital
in Baghdad the week before, destroying the third floor. Nothing was said about
casualties.
Scores of hospitals and clinics were said to have been hit by U.S. bombs in
the last dozen years; sources differ on the numbers of raids and casualties.
Iraqi hospitals were bombed under George H. W. Bush in his 1991 Persian Gulf
War and under William J. Clinton starting in December 1998. During the Clinton-NATO
war on Yugoslavia, air attacks on hospitals in various cities, including Belgrade,
Nis, and Surdulica, took lives in April and May 1999. In George W. Bushs
war on Afghanistan, 2001-2002, bombs struck hospitals in Herat, Kabul, and
Kandahar; some reports placed the death toll in the hundreds.
High toll of civilian casualties
The International Committee of the Red Cross said that the staffs of Baghdad
hospitals were stretched to their limits and that the number of casualties
in the city were so high, hospitals there stopped keeping count. About 100
wounded civilians were being admitted each hour during the height of the U.S.
bombing on April 6 and the start of Baghdad ground operations by U.S. troops
resulted in worse injuries and a massive increase in doctors workloads,
BBC said (April 8). They were running out of medicines and anaesthetics, performing
surgical operations with the aid of headache pills or no pain killers at all.
With no government to pay them, doctors were working for nothing.
Iraqi hospitals did not escape the looting and anarchy in occupied Iraqi cities.
In Mosul, all eight ambulances and some doctors' cars were reported stolen
at gunpoint at Jumhuriya Hospital. A worker at Saddam General Hospital told
a New York Times reporter that doctors left after their offices were looted
(nytimes.com, April 11). "We see injured people and we cannot do anything."
Hospitals in Baghdad were ransacked, divested even of baby incubators. Most
closed down. Shiite militia seized Baghdads Al-Kindi Hospital, using
it for a base (AFP and Reuters, April 12).
Red Cross workers said that in two days in Hilla, or Babylon, at least 400
people entered the hospital, far beyond its capacity; physicians worked around
the clock; "a truck was delivering totally dismembered dead bodies of
women and children" (Canadian Press, April 3). Sixty-one people from
six hamlets were dead at the hospital from cluster bomb attacks; probably
many others were buried in their home villages, said the Independent (UK,
April 3). It described wailing, maimed children and adult civilians with metal
buried deep in the flesh and "10 patients upon whom doctors had to perform
brain surgery to remove metal from their heads" after the sky rained
thousands of bomblets that exploded both outdoors and indoors. Eighteen died
in a bus (nytimes.com, April 3).
The Red Cross suspended operations in Baghdad when a team leader, from Canada,
was shot dead; he was in one of two cars marked with Red Cross emblems; other
civilian cars were also attacked by gunfire, and a total of 13 died in the
incident (Australian Broadcasting Corp., April 10).
The number of civilians killed in the latest war on Iraq was estimated at
between 2,180 and 2,653 as of May 1, according to iraqbodycount.net.
U.S. physicians protest
Dr. David Levinson, internist and emergency physician at Kaiser Hospital,
Richmond, Calif., comments on the attacks against hospitals. Under the auspices
of International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War, to which he
belongs, he traveled to Iraq in 1991 to assess the effects of the first U.S.-Iraq
war on health care.
"I am horrified by reports of the attacks on and destruction of health
care facilities by U.S. and allied forces. Such attacks are clear violations
of international law, which, coupled with the illegality of the U.S. invasion
itself, make the U.S. guilty of war crimes. Following the Gulf War of 1991,
I personally witnessed the terrible toll which that war had taken on health
care through the destruction of both health facilities and infrastructure
necessary to support civilian life. The result was the immeasurable death
and suffering of innocent people. We have now compounded horror upon horror.
War such as this must never be allowed to happen again."
The statement at the University of California at San Francisco (UCSF), published
April 3 in its newspaper, Synapse, called the attack on Iraq incompatible
with the healing professions, contrary to international law, and in reckless
disregard for lives and security. Among the 364 signers were the following
two MDs, who also react to the hospital attacks.
Dr. Biljana Horn, pediatrician and assistant clinical professor, UCSF: "If
it is true that the hospitals were attacked, which I still have a very hard
time believing, we should all be ashamed of ourselves for letting it happen.
I don't think that anyone should be content or pleased with the course of
this war, seeing all the blood and destruction it has left. It is not only
Iraq that is attacked; all people around the world with conscience are attacked
and victimized with this war."
Dr. Meg D. Newman, associate professor of clinical medicine, UCSF, and director
of AIDS education at San Francisco General Hospital: "The notion that
the armaments in this war would avoid civilian casualties was unrealistic,
as many of us anticipated. The depth of civilian casualties and direct destruction
of facilities caring for the injured has been shameful. As a U.S. citizen,
and more importantly as a citizen of the world, I stand committed to making
the U.S. accountable for this victimization. It is entirely within our capabilities
as world citizens to settle even complex conflicts non-violently despite what
has been our historical tendency to do otherwise."
Urgent appeal by Belgian doctors
Medical Aid for the Third World, a group from Brussels, Belgium, that has
had a small delegation of physicians in Baghdad since March 16, has called
attention to a "humanitarian catastrophe" caused by the U.S.-British
bombings and invasion of Iraq. On April 16, the doctors demanded that the
occupying powers carry out their responsibilities under the fourth Geneva
Convention and asked the UN to resume humanitarian operations at once. They
said, in part:
"We have seen hundreds of civilians, including many children, injured
and killed, often by prohibited weapons such as cluster bombs. We have seen
how ambulances and civilian cars have been hit by US troops.
"We have experienced how patients and health workers had difficulties
passing US military checkpoints and reaching medical facilities.
"We now see how the Iraqi civilian hospitals and other medical facilities
are plundered and neglected. Many Iraqi health professionals can no longer
report to work. Without electricity, safe water supply and the provision of
medicines and other medical supplies, many patients are simply left to die."
They placed the blame on U.S. and British authorities for launching a war
of aggression in violation of international law and repeatedly breaching the
Geneva Conventions. They said that at the request of victims, they asked a
lawyer to explore the possibility of a war crimes trial. Ultimately, a solution
required the unconditional withdrawal of occupation troops, full restoration
of Iraqi sovereignty, and payment by the U.S. and the U.K. for all damages
inflicted on the people and society, the group stated. Nevertheless:
"In the meantime, as occupying powers, the US and Great Britain have
the duty of ensuring the food and medical supplies of the population (Article
55 of the Fourth Geneva Convention). They likewise have the duty of ensuring
and maintaining, with the cooperation of national and local authorities, the
medical and hospital establishments and services, public health and hygiene
in the occupied territory. They must allow medical personnel to carry out
their duties (Article 56 of the Fourth Geneva Convention)....
" We call on the relevant UN agencies, such as the UNFP, UNICEF and the
WHO, to immediately resume their humanitarian operations in Iraq."
The signers were Doctors Geert Van Moorter, Colette Moulaert, Harrie Dewitte,
April Claire Geraets, and Bert De Belder, the groups coordinator.
May 1, 2003
War and Law League, P.O. Box 42-7237, San Francisco, CA 94142; warandlaw@yahoo.com;
www.warandlaw.homestead.com
grabbed this from the source code
by warren g 11:12pm Sun Jul 6 '03
I hate to bust your bubble my friend, but, under the Laws of Land Warfare
and the Geneva Convention (which by the way only Western Democracies follow)
Hospitals are not to be targeted, not are historical landmarks, schools or
religious structures UNLESS OPPOSING FORCES happen to establish postions and
fight from within them. We did not just blow up hospitals, the IRAQIS VIOLATED
THE GENEVA convention by operating combat operations out of them. KNOW YOUR
FACTS BEFORE YOU SAY DUMB STUFF. ALSO to the guy who spoke about the ambulances....the
IRAQIs used one as a car bomb in the early days of the war, and ALL vehicles,
FORGET JUST AMBULANCES are signaled to stop at a safe distance from the checkpoint
to be searched and cleared. IF SOMEONE runs a checkpoint, they run the risk
of being shot at. OUR MILITARY is the best in terms of going out of its way
to limit civilian casualties and such. (U always have a few individuals who
do dumb shit however) I didnt see Hussein going out of his way to avoid hitting
civilian targets in KUWAIT (I.e, the shopping mall etc.) PEOPLE GET A LOAD
OF REALITY AND SMELL THE COFFEE WAKE UP,.................... IT IS YOUR CONSTITUIONAL
RIGHT AND IN SOME CASES YOUR CIVIC DUTY TO DISSENT, BUT PLEASE BE AWARE OF
THE RELVENAT FACTS FIRST>
Only Western Democracies?
by Laughing at an idiot 6:13pm Mon Jul 7 '03
Only western democracies
follow the Geneva Conventions?
What a load of crap!
You do know that Hitler followed them? (Remember Hogan's Heroes?) Mussolini?
Stalin? And, yes, Saddam too ...
Notable exceptions:
Imperial Japan
The USA after 2001.
Amazing what comes out of the Freeper Idiots who troll this site