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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH

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To: SeachRE who wrote (507793)12/11/2003 12:58:51 PM
From: Skywatcher  Read Replies (1) of 769669
 
W is the biggest chickensh*t this country has ever seen!...just look at what HE IS AFRAID OF....besides FUNERALS of those HE HAS PERSONALLY SENT TO DIE....now they won't even count those innocents WE KILL!!!!!
Iraq Halts Its Count of Civilian War Deaths
From Times Staff and Wire Reports

BAGHDAD — Iraqi Health Ministry officials have ordered a halt to a count
of civilian deaths from the war and have told workers not to release figures
already compiled, the head of the ministry's statistics department said
Wednesday.

The health minister, Dr. Khodeir Abbas, denied that he or the U.S.-led
occupation authority had anything to do with the order, and said he didn't even
know about the survey of deaths, which number in the thousands.

Dr. Nagham Mohsen,
head of the ministry's
statistics department,
said the order came
from the ministry's
director of planning, Dr.
Nazar Shabandar, who
told her it was on behalf
of Abbas. She said the
U.S.-led Coalition
Provisional Authority,
which oversees the
ministry, didn't like the
idea of the count.

"We have stopped the collection of this
information because our minister didn't agree with it," she said.

Abbas, whose secretary said he was out of the country, sent an e-mail denying the charge.

"I have no knowledge of a civilian war casualty survey even being started by the Ministry of Health,
much less stopping it," he wrote. "The CPA did not direct me to stop any such survey."

Despite Abbas' professed ignorance, the Health Ministry's civilian death toll count had been reported
by media as early as August, and the count was widely anticipated by human rights organizations. The
ministry issued a preliminary figure of 1,764 deaths during the summer.

A Los Angeles Times survey of civilian deaths in Baghdad alone found that at least 1,700 civilians had
died in the five weeks starting March 20, when the war began.

Associated Press documented the deaths of 3,240 civilians between March 20 and April 20, based on
surveys of about half of Iraq's hospitals.

The Health Ministry's count was to be based on the records of all of Iraq's hospitals.

The U.S. military doesn't count civilian casualties from its wars, saying only that it tries to minimize
civilian deaths.

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