Doctors link cancer and abnormalities found in children living in the
south to depleted uranium contained in bombs that were used in Persian
Gulf war, TIMOTHY APPLEBY says
By TIMOTHY APPLEBY
Wednesday, March 13, 2002 - Print Edition,
Page A4
BASRA, IRAQ -- When a
baby is born in southern Iraq these days, the mother's first
question is not whether the child is male or female. "What she
wants to know is whether her baby is normal," says Janan
Ghalib, head of the cancer unit at Basra's Maternity and
Children Hospital.
The doctor needs only to flip open a photo album filled
with horrors to explain why. There are pictures of babies
without eyes, and some with too many eyes. There are infants
with huge growths, amphibian-like limbs and other deformities
so grotesque that the babies barely resemble human beings at
all.
And there are before-and-after photographs of
normal-looking young children who have apparently been
transformed into monsters -- the result, Dr. Ghalib believes,
of depleted uranium used by the U.S. military during the
Persian Gulf war.
The worries at Basra's main children's hospital are about
more than the uranium-laden bombs that rained down on southern
Iraq in 1991. If the United States carries through with
threats to again strike President Saddam Hussein's regime,
Iraqis such as Dr. Ghalib fear the fallout will again hit
them.
Although independent studies have not been carried out,
Iraqi medical experts in Basra, near the Kuwaiti border,
believe a sharp rise in recorded deformities and cancer --
especially leukemia -- is linked to the depleted uranium
contained in U.S. bombs dropped during the war. And they fear
much more may be coming their way.
Until the early 1990s, doctors say, the rate of what is
termed "congenital malformation" in the babies of southern
Iraq was no higher than anywhere else.
But beginning in about 1995, they say, the numbers began
steadily rising. Last year, the doctors knew of at least 260
instances of deformation in the region, accounting for 3 per
cent of all births. That compares with 221 in 2000 and just 11
in 1994.
As for leukemia, the hospital treated 15 children in 1993,
60 in 2000 and 73 last year. Those figures are incomplete, the
physicians stress, because some children are taken to Baghdad
for treatment, while others in the impoverished south are
never brought to their attention.
Health experts warn that the growing numbers, which are not
dissimilar to rates found in the West, could be the result of
other factors such as better information, worsening
health-care conditions or an environmental disaster -- a
nuclear leak, for example -- that has not been reported.
Still, the World Health Organization believes they are
worth investigating. It has tried to launch a research
program, but needs better data and equipment that would have
to be cleared by the United Nations sanctions committee, which
must approve all Iraqi imports.
In Basra, doctors believe the time lag between the gulf war
and the beginning of the trend is because of the depleted
uranium's "incubation" period of several years. They cite a
similar postwar delay in Japan after the nuclear attacks on
Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
The Pentagon has acknowledged using depleted uranium, not
only in Iraq and Kuwait but also in Kosovo during the 1999
conflict there. Depleted uranium is favoured in missiles
because it enhances their armour-piercing capacity.
However, the U.S. military has stated repeatedly it does
not believe the substance can have the effect on humans that
the Iraqi government is saying it does.
In nearby Kuwait, there has been no recorded increase in
child abnormalities since the war. Another major difficulty
with verification is that Iraq's medical records, like much
else within the health-care system, are in shambles.
But while the Iraqi government is often accused of
producing disinformation, Dr. Ghalib and her colleague, Assad
Essa Achim, the hospital's chief doctor in residence, come
across as dedicated professionals who have become almost weary
of relaying their findings.
"You reporters come in and listen, then you go away and
nothing ever happens," said Dr. Ghalib, visibly impatient.
While the Basra doctors await help, their hospital, like
almost every other one in Iraq, is in dire straits. Despite
the United Nations oil-for-food program that is supposed to
allow the import of humanitarian assistance, including medical
equipment, Dr. Achim says, the hospital is getting only 20 per
cent of what it needs.
Chemotherapy is not available because the necessary
equipment is considered to have military uses.
As a result, Dr. Achim says, 80 per cent of the children
diagnosed with leukemia die, compared with a 15-per-cent to
20-per-cent rate in the world's rich countries. "Bush and
Clinton really don't know what is happening here," he said of
U.S. President George W. Bush and former president Bill
Clinton. "If they did, they would hang themselves."