Żydowscy jankesi kąpią się w wannie Saddama!

IP: *.neoplus.adsl.tpnet.pl 07.04.03, 16:03
Obyście się w nich utopili! mordercy! ścierwa!
    • alex_scott Re: Bezradny skin popada w depresje:) 07.04.03, 16:09
      Gość portalu: Skin napisał(a):

      > Obyście się w nich utopili! mordercy! ścierwa!

      Biedny skin. Zobaczyl koniec swego Saddama i sie zalamal.Skonczysz w
      psychuszce:)




      • Gość: Skin Nawet onanizm mnie już nie rajcuje ! IP: *.neoplus.adsl.tpnet.pl 07.04.03, 16:49
        Chociaż chętnie zrobiłbym komus laske !
        • alex_scott Re: Nawet onanizm mnie już nie rajcuje ! 07.04.03, 17:22
          Gość portalu: Skin napisał(a):

          > Chociaż chętnie zrobiłbym komus laske !


          Saddamizm cie jednak najwyrazniej rajcuje... to jedz tam i zrob jego
          sobowtorowi laske:)
    • Gość: Elzbieta Re: Żydowscy jankesi kąpią się w wannie Saddama! IP: *.cpe.net.cable.rogers.com 08.04.03, 08:16
      Assyrian Forum

      Baghdad doctors working flat out - Red Cross

      Posted By: Tony BeitMalo (66-3-112-204-la-01.cvx.algx.net)
      Date: Monday, 7 April 2003, at 10:58 p.m.

      Baghdad doctors working flat out - Red Cross

      April 07 2003 at 06:51PM

      By Samia Nakhoul

      Baghdad - Grim scenes greeted Red Cross officials at the only Baghdad hospital
      they could reach through fighting on Monday, with casualties streaming in,
      surgeons working flat out and anaesthetics running low.

      A spokesperson for the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) in
      Baghdad said heavy fighting between US and Iraqi forces in the city prevented
      officials reaching any hospital but Kindi, near the city centre.

      There, doctors said they had taken in so many casualties that they were
      running short of anaesthetics and some equipment, which the Red Cross helped
      to replenish by delivering a truckload of supplies.

      'Water is becoming a worry'
      ICRC spokesperson Roland Huguenin-Benjamin said: "Surgeons have been working
      round the clock for the past two days and most are exhausted. Conditions are
      terrible.

      "You could hear very close range explosions. The windows are rattling from the
      thud of explosions. We saw a lot of ambulances and private cars, bringing in
      casualties."

      Doctors at Kindi said the hospital had taken in four dead and 176 wounded in
      the last 24 hours.

      The picture was similar at Kadhimiya hospital in the north of the city, where
      doctors told Reuters correspondent Hassan Hafidh that 18 dead and 141 wounded
      had been brought in since Sunday.

      Many patients said they were wounded by bombing as they tried to flee
      northwards by car on the road to the city of Mosul. One woman said she lost
      her parents and five siblings.

      "If the others have as many (casualties as Kindi), it is problematic.
      Tomorrow, we will try to go to others," Huguenin-Benjamin said.

      He said hospitals were now relying on generators and that getting clean water
      to patients was a priority.

      "We have also delivered bags of drinking water, tens of thousands of litres,
      to many hospitals to make sure that patients do not drink water that is not
      clear," he said.

      The ICRC is one of few humanitarian organisations to have international staff
      still in Baghdad, and at its headquarters in Geneva it said the capital was
      finding it hard to cope.

      "Some hospitals cannot take any more war wounded. They are stretched to the
      limits," spokeswoman Nada Doumani said.

      The wounded were not being turned away, but many hospitals have run out of
      beds and patients were being treated wherever doctors could find room.

      Iraq's problems have been compounded by international sanctions against the
      government of President Saddam Hussein which made it hard to stock analgesics
      and morphine.

      Aid agencies have long warned that Iraq and its some 26 million people were in
      poor shape after two earlier wars and years of sanctions.

      Power outages in many parts of Baghdad in recent days had compounded health
      concerns because they cut electricity to hospitals and water treatment plants.

      On Sunday, grids feeding Baghdad were mostly not working and less than 20
      percent of households were receiving limited power during the night, the ICRC
      said in its latest report on Iraq.

      "Water is becoming a worry. There are certain areas of Baghdad which do not
      have any at all," Doumani said in Geneva.

      Lack of clean drinking water is a major cause of diarrhoea and respiratory
      diseases, which already take a heavy toll of Iraqi children.

      Paul Sherlock, an aid official working with the United Nations, said
      distributing water would be difficult with fighting raging.

      "People will be able to manage for a day. If it goes on for longer, it means
      you will not be able to flush the toilets. You will have only limited water
      for straight drinking," he said.

      (Additional reporting by Richard Waddington in Geneva, Suleiman al-Khalidi in
      Amman and Kate Holton in London)


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