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War's Iraqi Death Toll Tops 50,000
By Louise Roug and Doug Smith
The Los Angeles Times
Sunday 25 June 2006
Higher than the US estimate but thought to be undercounted, the tally
is equivalent to 570,000 Americans killed in three years.
Baghdad At least 50,000 Iraqis have died
violently since the 2003 U.S.-led invasion, according to statistics from
the Baghdad morgue, the Iraqi Health Ministry and other agencies a
toll 20,000 higher than previously acknowledged by the Bush
administration.
Many more Iraqis are believed to have been
killed but not counted because of serious lapses in recording deaths in
the chaotic first year after the invasion, when there was no functioning
Iraqi government, and continued spotty reporting nationwide since.
The toll, which is mostly of civilians but
probably also includes some security forces and insurgents, is daunting:
Proportionately, it is equivalent to 570,000 Americans being killed
nationwide in the last three years.
In the same period, at least 2,520 U.S. troops
have been killed in Iraq.
Iraqi officials involved in compiling the
statistics say violent deaths in some regions have been grossly
undercounted, notably in the troubled province of Al Anbar in the west.
Health workers there are unable to compile the data because of violence,
security crackdowns, electrical shortages and failing telephone networks.
The Health Ministry acknowledged the
undercount. In addition, the ministry said its figures exclude the three
northern provinces of the semi-autonomous region of Kurdistan because
Kurdish officials do not provide death toll figures to the government in
Baghdad.
In the three years since Saddam Hussein's
regime was toppled, the Bush administration has rarely offered civilian
death tolls. Last year, President Bush said he believed that "30,000,
more or less, have died as a result of the initial incursion and the
ongoing violence against Iraqis."
Nongovernmental organizations have made
estimates by tallying media accounts; The Times attempted to reach a
comprehensive figure by obtaining statistics from the Baghdad morgue and
the Health Ministry and checking those numbers against a sampling of local
health departments for possible undercounts.
The Health Ministry gathers numbers from
hospitals in the capital and the outlying provinces. If a victim of
violence dies at a hospital or arrives dead, medical officials issue a
death certificate. Relatives claim the body directly from the hospital and
arrange for a speedy burial in keeping with Muslim beliefs.
If the morgue receives a body usually those
deemed suspicious deaths officials there issue the death certificate.
Health Ministry officials said that because
death certificates are issued and counted separately, the two data sets
are not overlapping.
The Baghdad morgue received 30,204 bodies from
2003 through mid-2006, while the Health Ministry said it had documented
18,933 deaths from "military clashes" and "terrorist
attacks" from April 5, 2004, to June 1, 2006. Together, the toll
reaches 49,137.
However, samples obtained from local health
departments in other provinces show an undercount that brings the total
well beyond 50,000. The figure also does not include deaths outside
Baghdad in the first year of the invasion.
The documented cases show a country descending
further into violence.
At the Baghdad morgue, the vast majority of
bodies processed had been shot execution-style. Many showed signs of
torture drill holes, burns, missing eyes and limbs, officials said.
Others had been strangled, beheaded, stabbed or beaten to death.
The morgue records show a predominantly
civilian toll; the hospital records gathered by the Health Ministry do not
distinguish between civilians, combatants and security forces.
But Health Ministry records do differentiate
causes of death. Almost 75% of those who died violently were killed in
"terrorist acts," typically bombings, the records show. The
other 25% were killed in what were classified as military clashes. A
health official described the victims as "innocent bystanders,"
many shot by Iraqi or American troops, in crossfire or accidentally at
checkpoints.
With the entire country a battleground, it is
likely that some of the dead may have been insurgents or members of
militias.
"The way to think about the violence is
that it's not just the insurgent attacks that matter," said David
Lake, a member of the Center for Study of Civil War, an international
group of scholars who study the causes and effects of internal strife.
"What we should be concerned about is the sense of security at the
individual level
. If the fear has gotten out of control."
Societies fall apart when people stop believing
the government can keep them safe them and instead turn to militias for
protection, said Lake, who is a professor of political science at UC San
Diego.
"The question is, have we crossed that
threshold? My sense is, we probably have, and that's why I'm worried about
the long-term outcome."
Three years of fighting have taken their toll
on the country. Gauging how many people died in the first year after the
invasion, which included the initial invasion and aerial bombardment of
Baghdad, and weeks of near-anarchy afterward, has proved difficult.
According to a 2003 Times survey of Baghdad
hospitals, at least 1,700 civilians died in the capital just in the five
weeks after the war began. An analysis by Iraqi Body Count, a
nongovernmental group that tracks civilian deaths by tallying media
reports, estimated that 5,630 to 10,000 Iraqi civilians were killed
nationwide from March 19 through April 2003.
Health Ministry figures for May in each of the
last three years show war-related deaths more than tripling nationwide,
from 334 in May 2004 to 1,154 last month. And as the violence has
continued to escalate, it also has become increasingly centralized. At
least 2,532 people were killed nationwide last month. Of those, 2,155
85% died in Baghdad.
"Everything has increased," said one
official in the Health Ministry who didn't want to be identified for
security reasons. "Bombings have increased, shootings have
increased."
Iraqi Body Count estimates that 38,475 to
42,889 Iraqis have been killed since the invasion. The estimate does not
include deaths among the Iraqi security forces.
The toll in Iraq has been a sensitive issue for
the Bush administration, which has maintained that it doesn't track
civilian deaths. However, military officials in Baghdad acknowledged that
they track the number of civilians accidentally killed by U.S. troops.
Eric Stover, Director of UC Berkeley's Human
Rights Center and an expert on medical and social consequences of war,
said that the high death toll makes rebuilding society increasingly
difficult.
"The way to look at the effects of deaths
on that scale is also in the context of how people are living," said
Stover, who has also done human rights work in Iraq and identified mass
graves in Bosnia-Herzegovina.
"It's not just the immediate deaths that
people are dealing with, but fractured lives. They are living in this
constant state of fear. It's a very gloomy picture."
Roug reported from Baghdad and Smith from
Los Angeles. Times staff writer Raheem Salman in Baghdad contributed to
this report.
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