Vatche
Arslanian was a delegate in Georgia before taking up his post
in Baghdad. He said his greatest reward was bringing a smile
and dignity to people (p9551)
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Vatche Arslanian: bringing smiles
and dignity to the people of Iraq
10 April 2003
The International Federation
has expressed its sadness at the death of Vatche Arslanian, a much-respected
International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) delegate shot dead
in Baghdad on Tuesday, and extended its “profound sympathy”
to the Canadian's family, friends and colleagues.
“From those that knew him, Vatche Arslanian was a selfless man,
who in his everyday work made practical yet life-saving contributions
to those in need,” the Federation’s Secretary General,
Didier Cherpitel, said in a letter to ICRC Director General Angelo
Gnaedinger. “He was best known for his energy and optimism by
his Iraqi colleagues, for whom he had great respect as fellow professionals
and humanitarians. Indeed, he was an exemplary representative of our
Movement.”
Arslanian’s ICRC colleagues recovered his body on Wednesday
and took it to Baghdad’s Ibn Nafis hospital. He had been shot
on the previous afternoon.
Seven vehicles, including two in which Arslanian and other ICRC staff
members were travelling, were caught in crossfire. Arslanian died
instantly. A total of 13 people are reported to have been killed in
the same incident.
The ICRC vehicles were clearly marked with large red crosses visible
from a distance.
“Each time we lose one of our own, the impact on us all is dramatic
and widely evident. At such dark moments we are reminded of the criticality
of redoubling our efforts in disseminating who we are, what we do
and by what principles we act,” Cherpitel said.
The sentiment was echoed by Robert Barnes, President of the Canadian
Red Cross. “It is a sad testament to war that its casualties
are all too often people like Mr. Arslanian, whose sole purpose for
being in harm’s way is to bring humanitarian relief to victims.
We need to remember him proudly for his sacrifice.”
Arslanian, 48, from Oromocto in New Brunswick, had been working as
a senior logistician with the ICRC in Iraq since July 2001.
He was one of six ICRC expatriates who decided to stay in Baghdad
and work alongside their local colleagues during the worst of the
fighting, a courageous decision that “made a marked difference
to the lives of thousands of people,” according to Balthasar
Staehelin, the ICRC's Delegate-General for the Middle East and North
Africa. “We can find some solace in knowing that he helped to
make that difference," he said.
The ICRC team in Baghdad are holding a day of mourning on Thursday.
In his work in Iraq, Arslanian played a key role in efforts to deliver
urgently needed supplies, in particular to hospitals and water treatment
plants.
Speaking in January, he described his work as “challenging and
rewarding”.
“Helping to bring a smile and dignity to a fellow human being
is deeply fulfilling. It is the best reward that one can have,”
he said.
Arslanian, a former town councillor, became a Canadian Red Cross volunteer
in 1991. His first overseas mission with the ICRC, also as a senior
logistician, was in Georgia in 2000, when he was on loan from the
Canadian Red Cross.
Related links:
ICRC
Iraq: humanitarian crisis
Canadian
Red Cross
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