14 dead' as missiles hit Baghdad market
By PA News Reporters
The Independent, UK
26 March 2003
At least 14 civilians were killed and 30 injured today after coalition air
strikes hit a market in Baghdad, Iraqi officials claimed.
Witnesses at the scene reported burned bodies on the streets of the northern residential Shaab district.
Television footage showed a large crater in the middle of the road, smouldering
and damaged buildings, a child with a head bandage, and bodies wrapped in
plastic sheeting in the back of a pick-up truck.
Wrecked cars were strewn across the roads, some still ablaze. The centre
of the blast seems to have been a busy shopping street of ground floor shops
under blocks of flats. Residents said there were no military targets in the
area. Others described hearing a low flying aircraft followed by two loud
explosions.
Local people claimed "dozens and dozens" were dead while Lieutenant Colonel
Hamad Abdullah, head of civil defence for the area, said 14 people were killed
and 30 injured when two cruise missiles hit the area.
The incident would appear to be the first major case of so-called "collateral
damage" involving substantial civilian casualties, which allied chiefs have
been trying to avoid.
"There is a very angry atmosphere at the moment," said BBC journalist Paul Wood.
The footage of the apparent strike on innocent civilians is likely to send waves of outrage around the Arab world.
In London, the Prime Minister's official spokesman said Downing Street was
seeking information about the market blast, but at this stage did not know
the cause of the explosion.
He added: "We have always accepted that there will be some very regrettable civilian casualties."
US Central Command in Qatar said it was investigating the reports.
The UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan expressed growing concern at the "humanitarian
casualties" of the war and reiterated that the United States is responsible
for the welfare of the civilian population.
"I would want to remind all belligerants that they should respect international
humanitarian law and take all necessary steps to protect civilians. Besides,
they are responsible for the welfare of the civilian population in the area,"
he said.
The deaths of innocent civilians are an unavoidable feature of armed conflict throughout history.
In the last Gulf War and in Operation Desert Fox in 1998 - a four-day bombing
campaign on Iraq following the expulsion of UN weapons inspectors - much
was made of the "smart-bomb" technology in hitting specific targets.
But battle damage assessments of Operation Desert Fox showed that 15% of
missions had missed their target and fewer than one in four were considered
a successful attack where the target was destroyed.
Then 10% of weapons were guided, but in the present conflict 90% are reportedly guided either by satellite or laser.
On February 13 1991, an allied missile struck an air-raid shelter in Baghdad, killing at least 314 people.
Iraqi officials took the BBC's Jeremy Bowen to see the aftermath. While he
was accompanied at all times by Iraqi minders, he said the grief and anger
shown by the survivors and bereaved was not a propaganda stunt.
In the same conflict a stray bomb from an RAF Tornado hit a market near a
bridge in Samawa, a city on the Euphrates River in southern Iraq, killing
a reported 130 people and wounding 78.
The RAF apologised and called the incident a "one-off".
But it was just one in a series of "one-offs" that led the Red Crescent charity
to estimate that as many as 7,000 civilians had been killed in allied bombing
raids.
© 2003 Independent Digital (UK) Ltd