| Diary from Baghdad, 8 April: Dr. Geert Van Moorter by satellite phone |
Dr. Van Moorter treats injured British cameraman
While Americans leave injured Iraqis
to die…
Bert De Belder
This
morning an American tank fired at the Hotel Palestine, where most of the foreign journalists who are not
‘embedded’ with the British American invasion force are staying. By chance Dr.Geert Van Moorter found
himself on the 15th floor of the hotel (the Medical Team of Geneeskunde voor de Derde Wereld – Medicine for
the Third World are staying in the nearby Sheraton Hotel).
Geert: ’at first I didn’t realize that a bomb had hit the building itself, only three floors below the one where I was. Then I started downstairs. As an emergency doctor I am used to keeping my cool and calming down others in emergency situations, which was what I did of course.
I accompanied a woman who was very
upset, who was in shock, and helped her getting downstairs. Only at that moment people came telling me that
there were casualties. A man of Reuters came running with a first aid packet of medicines. Together with him I
ran to the first injured person, a British cameraman called Paul Pascual. I helped getting him into a car and
carried out a first quick medical examination. I soon saw that he was not in too bad a state and wanted to
wait for possible graver cases, but the driver was so nervous that he tore away at once straight to the
nearest hospital. Not without taking risks as the bombing continued. Soon we arrived at the Saddam Centre for
Plastic Surgery. This is a highly specialized hospital, but like so many other hospitals it had been prepared
to cope with an influx of war victims for several months already.
For
six hours I joined the work at the emergency department, helping the devoted Iraqi doctors Dr. Mehdi Abudi en
Dr. Walid Al-Dun. That is how I was able to observe the situation in the hospital from within. We lacked a
certain medicine needed for a correct general anaesthesia, and also the thin thread which the surgeon wanted
to use for mending a cut tendon in our patient’s foot. In the middle of one of the operations electricity
broke down, so with it all the apparatuses to monitor the patient’s condition. Using one lamp and a simple
reanimation machine we carried on…
There is also a shortage of hospital staff, for a very simple reason: many health workers just don’t get to the hospital anymore, or they have many wounded or dead relatives, or they want to get their families into safety. I saw the radiology technician wipe the blood from the floor, somebody who just happens to live in the neighbourhood carry out the work of a nurse.
Certain hospitals have had to be evacuated because they are in the danger zones. So the American war of aggression does not only offend the right to live but also the right to receive medical treatment.’
‘It
was the anaesthetist’s story that impressed me most. The man had not seen his wife and three little children
for days on end. They live on the road to Hilla, in the south. Yesterday the doctor went there for a short
time with the ambulance. On his way he saw a lot of corpses at the side of the road, but injured people too.
The latter were being ignored by the advancing American troops! One of the countless offences against
international law by the US! And meanwhile CNN goes on showing images of G.I.s shaking hands and distributing
chocolate!
Fortunately the anaesthetist succeeded
in taking four casualties to hospital in his car, where they were treated in safety.