Iraqis remove corpses under
U.S. oversight
USA Today
Posted 11/16/2004 6:34 PM
FALLUJAH, Iraq (AP) — Murmuring "God is great," two
dozen Iraqi men collected corpses Tuesday in a U.S.
Marine-directed effort to rid Fallujah of festering bodies in
keeping with Muslim burial principles.
Officers said the Marines themselves could more quickly pick
up the estimated 1,200 insurgents killed during a week of
fighting that took back the city from insurgents, but agreed with
Iraqis who felt it was crucial they retrieve the remains of their
fellow Muslims.
"We're Iraqis and they're Iraqis and we want to get them,"
said Mohammed Ali, a 32-year-old farmer helping remove bodies.
"It's in our religion. The rules say that relatives or families
or Arabs should help them."
Gagging amid the overpowering stench of rotting flesh, the
Iraqis had to take special care because of the danger that
insurgents booby-trapped some bodies with explosives. On one
stoop, the Iraqis pushed over a corpse and a grenade rolled out
of its pocket. The weapon didn't detonate, but Marines quickly
hurried the workers away.
Gunfire could still be heard as Marines hunted for hiding
insurgents, but the intensity was down significantly and
commanders said Fallujah was securely in their control.
Bodies lay in homes, on verandahs and in shallow, makeshift
graves, buzzed over by flies and darkened by days of
decomposition. Muslims generally bury their dead within 24 hours,
but combat had prevented the interment of most corpses.
U.S. Marine Capt. Alex Henegar, a civil affairs officer
attached to the 3rd Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment, arranged the
body pickup in Fallujah's hotly contested northern
neighborhoods.
The collection began Sunday, with 22 corpses removed for a
pauper's burial in a dusty lot on the outskirts of town.
The effort stalled Monday when the workers provided by a local
religious leader demanded that Marines first open a road to their
village, but they resumed work after Henegar arranged for a
shipment of humanitarian aid. The crew recovered 14 bodies
Tuesday.
Henegar, from Lookout Mountain, Ga., said he didn't think any
other collection efforts were under way in Fallujah.
"There's no real theory behind it. It's the appropriate way of
collecting the dead," he said. "It's their religion. They have
their rites and we want to allow them to do it. The idea is to
show respect to them, the Iraqi people, and their religion."
Henegar said authorities were eager to clear the city of
bodies quickly, to lessen health risks for returning
civilians.
Dr. Salah Al-Issawi, acting director of Fallujah General
Hospital, voiced similar concern. "The city is completely
isolated and we expect the decaying of dead bodies and the spread
of diseases," he said in an interview with Al-Jazeera
television.
Henegar and a small group of Marines escorted 24 Iraqis on
three flatbed trucks into the northern Jolan neighborhood, where
the volunteers were given latex gloves, surgical masks, hand
disinfectant — but no payment.
"We have a whole pot of money for short-term reconstruction
projects like this, but they won't take a dime," Henegar
said.
The Iraqis said the Quran prohibits payment for helping in a
burial.
In a state of barely contained panic, the Iraqis rushed into
housing compounds to lift bodies onto blankets, then into the
same body bags Marines use to transport the remains of their dead
colleagues. The Iraqi men coughed, gagged and choked from the
stench.
With each body, the Iraqi men whispered "Allahu akbar" —
"God is great — three times.
They found four bodies that had been hastily buried outside a
house in shallow graves, marked by cinder blocks. The Iraqis dug
up the bodies, wrapped them in blankets and lifted them onto a
truck. A message written on a wall in front of the graves
identified the corpses as two men and two women.
"This is a disaster. But unfortunately it's the war," Sheik
Hamed Farhan Abu Shahin, a local elder helping arrange the
collection, told Henegar, who nodded agreement.
Bodies are scattered across Fallujah after fighting that began
Nov. 8. The U.S. military declared the Sunni Muslim stronghold
captured within a week, with 38 Americans, six Iraqi soldiers and
an estimated 1,200 insurgents dead.
"This exemplifies the horrors of war," said Marine Capt. P.J.
Batty, from Park City, Utah, of the body pickup. "We don't wish
this upon anyone, but everyone needs to understand there are
consequences for not following the Iraqi government."
Copyright 2004 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This
material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or
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