Inass Mouaiid tells her story to fellow Iraqi Red Crescent volunteers
in Basra (p10287)
Children
at the Iraqi Red Crescent-run summer camp put on a karate demonstration.
Inass, a physical education instructor, works with the youngsters
there. (p10286)
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Iraqis recount grim realities of
war
19 August 2003
by Rana Sidani in Basra
They now call her “the
burier”. For Inass Mouaiid, a 25-year-old Iraqi Red Crescent
volunteer, burying 50 bodies was difficult. But she also had the courage
to carry injured people to hospitals while under fire.
Only now, when the military operation in Iraq is over, is she afraid.
She is afraid of being kidnapped. The streets in her neighbourhood,
which she knows by heart, have a new dark face in these days. There
are persistent rumours that gangs are kidnapping women, raping and
killing them.
To protect themselves, some girls are carrying knifes, while others
do not venture outdoors without the protection of a male relative.
Going out into the streets alone nowadays is a risky decision. With
the new security realities, it has become dangerous for a young woman
in Iraq to leave her home, even to go to school. Day by day, it grows
more difficult for women to have a role in public life.
It was not like this before or during the war. The main problem female
Iraq Red Crescent volunteers faced then was to convince their traditional
society that they could have an active role in rescue efforts during
military operations.
"My family, neighbours, even people in the streets told me that
battlefields are not intended for women" she explained. "This
attitude motivated me even more to prove that women have a helping
role in wartime" she added.
Inass and her fellow volunteers now share many sad stories of their
rescue operations. Basra University was the saddest. They were only
three young volunteers - Inass, another woman, Israa, and Mohamed
- using just an ambulance and a pick-up truck.
The University compound and the small lake next to it were scattered
with the bodies of dead soldiers. Inass found two severed heads, buried
in the mud next to the lake. Her two colleagues could not bear to
retrieve these heads and put them in the pick-up with the other body
parts, so Inass volunteered for the task.
"I tried to pull up one head by its hair, but I failed because
it was too well stuck in the mud" she remembers in gruesome detail.
Kneeling in this field of death, she hesitated for a moment, tempted
to abandon this horrific effort.
"But then I began to think that this man had a family, and possibly
children who are waiting to hear any news about him. This gave me
the courage to try again,” Inass said.
"I grabbed it by one ear and put my other hand into the mud under
the skull to lift it out carefully.” She had to do this slowly
to protect what remained of the face's features "to be able to
take a photo of him and hopefully to identify him" she noted.
She used the same technique to recover the second head.
Inass says she will never forget the second disembodied head. Its
eyes were staring at her plaintively, as if pleading: "please
bury me". It made her feel sick, but she still had much to do.
The small lake beside Basra University had many bodies floating in
it. They had begun decomposing after spending several days in the
water after the fighting had stopped. Inass and Israa could not swim,
so Mohamed had to plunge into the fetid water. He tied a rope to the
first body, fearing that it would fall apart when it was pulled to
the bank.
The two girls held the other end of the rope. Once Mohamed had finished
tying the body, they pulled it slowly towards them. They then used
their Red Crescent stretcher to carefully carry the first decomposed
corpse to their pick-up. The process took hours, slowly carrying the
stretcher from the lake to the truck.
This is how three Red Crescent volunteers spent one day after the
war. They stopped only when there was no space left in the pickup.
Not all Red Crescent work is so horrific. Inass is now involved in
psychological support activities at a children's summer camp. Dealing
with children, she says gives her the energy and motivation to continue
her voluntary work.
Related links:
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