| Dr. Geert Van Moorter on the phone from Baghdad, March 24, 10:25 p.m. |
“I
just called to say that (Dr.) Colette (Moulaert) and me are still alive. Actually we are fine, although we’re
beginning to feel tired.
Today
we went to the crater a cruise missile made in the middle of a residential area. A ‘mistake’ of course…
The crater had a diameter of 15 meters and was about ten meters deep. In a perimeter of 100 meters windows
were shattered and doors were blown off their hinges. A neighbor, who miraculously survived, cursed Bush and
said: “Now we are in the same boat as the Palestinians. Every time their houses are destroyed, they are
repairing them again. We’ll do the same, up to ten times if necessary!”
The
people’s morale remains high. The first two days of the attacks the population of Baghdad was nervous
because of the American propaganda claiming a swift victory. But now the US troops apparently have a hard time
and Iraq’s resistance shows to be strong the people are beaming with confidence. “Let them come,” they
say, “They’ll regret it!” Still I’m afraid the US might have some dirty tricks up its sleeve and make
many casualties in Baghdad. Out of frustration maybe…
We went
back to the Yarmouk hospital. There were some 30 new patients compared to yesterday. I brought drawings for
the injured children, made by Belgian schoolchildren. A colorful drawing of the globe with the slogan “Peace,
No War!” painted a smile on the face of an injured girl. In the emergency room the anesthesiologist said
they still had enough supplies for the time being. But they only have 4 respirators for the heavily injured…
We also met a neurosurgeon who rushes back and forth between several hospitals to perform brain surgery. He
had been working through the night. The bloodstains were still on his glasses! Tomorrow we’ll go to another
hospital and pay a visit to the Unicef staff.”
