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What
happened to Halabja on the Bloody Friday?
The brutal
massacre of the oppressed and innocent people of Halabja began
before the sunrise of Friday, 18th of
March 1988. The Iraqi regime committed its most tragic and horrible
crime from the beginning of the imposed war until now against the
civilian people on Friday, 18th of March. On that day, Halabja was
bombarded more than twenty times by Iraqi regime's warplanes with
chemical and cluster bombs. That Friday afternoon, the magnitude of
Iraqi crimes became evident. In the streets and alleys of Halabja,
corpses piled up over one another. Tens of children, while playing
in front of the their houses in the morning, were martyred instantly
by cyanide gases. The innocent children did not even have time to
run back home. Some children fell down at the threshold of the door
of their houses and never rose again.
A mother who
embraced her one-year-old baby, fell down two steps from her house
and was martyred. In a 150 meter area in the main street of Halabja,
at least fifty women and children were martyred as a result of the
deployment of the chemical weapons. A father was sitting over the
bodies of his wife and ten of his children in one of the alleys of
Halabja and was wailing. The sound of his wailing touched any cruel
human being. The crimes were huge, very huge.
In a Simorgh
Van, the corpses of 20 women and children who had been prepared to
leave the town and the chemical bombardment of the town had deprived
them of this opportunity, made any observer stop and ponder about
the depth of the catastrophe. Fatal wounds on the corpses of these
innocent people were evident.
The doors of
most houses were left open and inside of each house, there
were some martyred and wounded people.
The enemy had heightened the cruelty and heart-handedness to its
peak and took no pity on its own people.
Saddam's crime in the chemical bombardment of Halabja has indeed
been unprecedented in the history of
the imposed war. Saddam's crime in Halabja can never be compared to
the tragedy of the chemical bombardment of Sardasht. In Halabja more
than five thousand people were martyred and over seven thousand more
people were wounded.
Women and children formed 75 percent of the martyrs and wounded of
the bloody Friday of Halabja.
Along with
Halabja, Khormal, Dojaileh and their surrounding villages were also
chemically bombarded frequentlybut the center of the catastrophe was Halabja. |