The Week in Iraq
by Lily Hamourtziadou
7 Sep 2008
‘The notorious Abu Ghraib prison is getting a face-lift: work to reopen the facility and construct a museum documenting Saddam Hussein's crimes…a section of the 280-acre site just west of Baghdad will be converted into the museum featuring execution chamber exhibits and other displays of torture tools used by Hussein's regime - including an iron chain used to tie prisoners together (‘Iraq's Abu Ghraib prison getting makeover,’ Bushra Juhi, Associated Press, September 5, 2008).
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That may be so –as far as this particular prison is concerned. But the crimes committed by our armies and leaders go far beyond the walls of this prison. If only are crimes were limited to the actions of a handful of soldiers, if only our responsibility went as far as the actions of a few psychopaths…then Busho Ibrahim would be right. Unfortunately we are guilty of far more: the deaths of thousands of innocent people and the devastation of a whole country.
Since my last editorial, in late May, around 2,000 civilians have been killed in Iraq. Over 7,000 since the beginning of the year -317 of them children. Not our children, of course, but theirs, so we do not mourn their untimely deaths. We instead speak of ‘success’ and of ‘godly tasks’ in order to make this less shameful, in order to have something to be proud of rather than something that taints our very souls.
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It is our legacy in Iraq. On a par with Saddam Hussain’s. It is the legacy of both fanatics and cold-blooded killers; ours is the legacy of suicide bombers and ruthless politicians. And there is no museum, no memorial, nothing to chronicle the crimes we have committed, nothing to document the atrocities our leaders and the Iraqi government are guilty of. The horror of the last few years…the lives lost…who were they? Who are those who are being killed today? Who will be blown up, shot, tortured tomorrow? Which family will lose its child next?
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