| Baghdad Diaries, April 4-5: Dr. Geert Van Moorter and Dr. Colette Moulaert through satellite telephone |
Friday
April 4
Dr.
Geert Van Moorter: “I had to stay in the hotel today: sick, diarrhea, low-grade fever. Colette was able to
go around the city. She said everything was relatively calm. There were no indications of people fleeing the
city. I learned from journalists here in the hotel that they had been able to meet five different Iraqi
ministers in just one day. I don’t have a crystal ball but it gives me the impression that the Iraqi
government is not in a state of panic and still is on top of the situation.”
“Colette
visited the hospital and the headquarters of the Red Crescent. Both had to endure aerial bombings. The
hospital was recently fixed up and painted. Now almost all windows are shattered and there is a lot of damage
to the equipment. Targeting the internationally recognized symbol of the Red Crescent and medical
infrastructure is forbidden by international rules of war but the attackers don’t give a damn about that.”
“Colette
also paid a visit to a women’s group in a popular neighborhood. The women are organized per neighborhood and
also take up responsibilities in the defense. The women Colette met were organized in a cooking collective
catering to 250 members of the people’s militia.”
I tell
Geert that we would be trying to send a new team of two doctors tomorrow with medicines and surgical supplies.
Geert is excited about the news, but also very practical: “They can bring some stuff to facilitate our work
here: Batteries for my flashlight; a small screwdriver, insulating tape and splitters so we can tap
electricity when there is a power outage; mini-disks for our documents and pictures; liquid soap because when
there’s no electricity the hotel’s laundry service is also closed; medicines for the journalists over
here, you never know; and a cable to connect my video camera to my laptop.”
Colette
calls her husband Bob Roeck. She is also excited about the arrival of two new doctors. We selected Dr. Claire
Geraets and Dr. Harrie Dewitte, Colette’s colleagues in Doctors for the People. Three weeks in Baghdad, and
17 days under aerial bombings, are starting to weigh on Colette. But she is still in high spirits as usual. As
soon as the new team arrives, the four of them will decide whether somebody will try to go back to Belgium
with the pictures, video footage, articles and interviews because they haven’t been able to send any of them
since Baghdad was shut off from the internet. It is a source of big frustration for Geert because it has
become his obsession to get concrete information about the war in the media as fast as possible. “You got to
understand,” he grumbles, “we’re seeing the atrocities of this war every day. And every day there are
more civilian casualties!”
At 8
p.m. I have Geert on the line again. If Harrie and Claire already called from Damascus? That’s a little
impatient. They haven’t even landed in Damascus! So back to the sories of the day. Geert: “I was able to
join a bus with journalists. We toured the city for one and a half hours and saw big parts of Baghdad,
crossing two bridges over the Tigris without any problems. Cars were queuing at the gasoline stations. Fuel
seems to be rationed now. In the upscale neighborhoods the doors and windows of some houses were barricaded
with bricks to prevent looting. On the street corners members of the militia were digging themselves in. But
everywhere the people remain friendly as usual!”
And
what about the advancing U.S.-troops? “We didn’t notice anything,” Geert answers, “but a team of
‘human shields’ has been evacuated for some time by the Iraqi authorities from Dora, a neighborhood in the
southwest of Baghdad where also some power plants and oil refineries are located. Apparently the area has come
under fire although many ordinary people are living there. They found it too dangerous for the ‘human
shields’ to stay there but now they have already gone back.”