Gunny
Gold Member
By ERICA GOODE
Published: March 16, 2008
BAGHDAD Thousands of Kurds gathered Sunday in the town of Halabja, in the northern uplands of Iraq, to mark a grim anniversary: the day 20 years ago when clouds of poison gas swept through the town, killing as many as 5,000 people.
The chemical bombings, part of Saddam Husseins campaign against the Kurds, began in the early evening of March 16, 1988, and continued through the night.
On Sunday, ceremonies were held to commemorate the dead and to pay homage to the more than 200 living victims who suffer lingering effects from the poisons used in the bombings. Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Malikis government called for a moment of silence and a reading of a verse of the Koran in remembrance of those who were killed.
One survivor, Ismail Abdullah, 50, who had helped to bury the dead after the attacks, died on Saturday.
Luqman Muhammad, a spokesman for relatives of the Halabja victims, said that Mr. Abdullah had died from health problems caused by the chemical bombings.
He needed a treatment but the necessary medicines were not available for him in Kurdistan hospitals, Mr. Muhammad said.
When the bombs struck, many residents, believing they were conventional explosives, ran to their basements, but could not escape the gas. Survivors later said that some victims died immediately, while others, gasping for breath and vomiting, took longer.
For several years after the attacks, Halabja, a village of unpaved streets and old stone buildings, was abandoned. Survivors suffered health problems that included sterility, breathing problems and children born with deformities.
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/16/w...46cf3cb3de7ce0&ei=5088&partner=rssnyt&emc=rss
Since we know Saddam posessed no WMDs, the "chemical" that murdered these Kurds must have been a collective, overactive imagination.