From the Los Angeles Times
THE CONFLICT IN IRAQ
A Town Awoke to Slaughter
Iraqis
say Marines went house to house killing Haditha residents. 'I wish I
had died with them,' says a child who saw her family slain.
By Megan K. Stack and Raheem Salman
Times Staff Writers
June 1, 2006
BAGHDAD — The killing began shortly after sunrise on a November day. As
a U.S. patrol rolled through Haditha, a homemade bomb exploded beneath
the belly of a Humvee, rocking the sleepy riverside town.
"The Americans who were in the first vehicle came back to the damaged
car. They started to scream and shout," said a gray-haired shopkeeper
who would give his name only as Abu Mukarram. He said he watched the
scene unfold from his bedroom window. "After some minutes, everything
was quiet. During this quiet, no bullets were shot. They were moments
of expectation."
Ten minutes passed in silence. Then Abu Mukarram heard the crack of the
first bullets.
Planted by insurgents at the edge of the road, the bomb had killed
Lance Cpl. Miguel Terrazas, a 20-year-old Marine from El Paso.
Survivors and witnesses said Terrazas' death drove some of the troops
into a murderous rage.
Survivors say that furious Marines rampaged through a quiet street,
bursting into homes and gunning down Iraqi civilians — including
children, women and an elderly man in a wheelchair. Their account
appears to match details emerging from a military investigation of the
deaths of at least 24 Iraqi civilians on the morning of Nov. 19.
For some in the United States, the Haditha killings are reminiscent of
the torture at Abu Ghraib, both cases involving conduct by troops that
suggests a breakdown of morality in a climate of fear and violence.
President Bush said Wednesday that he was "troubled" by news reports of
the slayings.
"I am mindful that there is a thorough investigation going on. If, in
fact, the laws were broken, there will be punishment," Bush said in his
first public comments on the incident, made during a photo session with
President Paul Kagame of Rwanda.
In Iraq, by contrast, word of the deaths has spread slowly out of
Haditha, blurring into the steady background noise of daily horrors. To
a public that has endured more than three years of combat, rampant
bombings and executions, news of two dozen more lost lives grabbed few
headlines.
Sliced in half by the Euphrates and nestled in fruit groves, Haditha is
a quiet farming community of 90,000 people in the midst of barren
western desert in Al Anbar province. Farmers tend date orchards, and
grow oranges and apples in the shadow of the palms.
This account of the Nov. 19 killings comes from witness and survivor
interviews conducted by Iraqi reporters for The Times in Baghdad and
Haditha. The reporter who traveled to Haditha cannot be named for
security reasons.
After the roadside bombing, the Marines arrived first at the door of
Abdul Hamid Hassan Ali, 89, an amputee who used a wheelchair. They shot
him, then turned their guns on his three sons and their families,
survivors said.
Waleed Abdul Hameed, a 48-year-old worker in Al Anbar's religious
affairs office, was among the first of the family members to be gunned
down. His 9-year-old daughter, Eman, said she was still wearing her
pajamas when the Marines arrived. Her 7-year-old brother, Abdul Rahman,
said he hid his face with a blanket when his father was shot.
A few minutes later, the boy saw his mother fall to the ground, dying.
"I saw her while she was crying," he said. "She fell down on the floor
bleeding." Speaking days ago in Haditha, months after the attacks, the
boy broke into tears, covered his eyes with his hands, and began to
mutter to himself.
At his side, his elder sister began to speak again. Eman described
how the two had waited for help, the bodies of their family members
sprawled on the floor.
"We were scared," she said. "I tried to hide under the bed." With
shrapnel injuries to her legs, she lay still for two hours.
When the shooting began, Eman's aunt, Hibba Abdullah snatched her
5-month-old niece off the floor. The baby's mother had dropped her in
shock after seeing her husband gunned down. Clutching the child,
Abdullah ran out of the house. She and the baby, Aasiya, survived.
The baby's mother "completely collapsed when they killed her husband in
front of her," Abdullah said. "I ran away carrying Aasiya outside the
house, but when the Americans returned they killed Asma, the mother of
the child."
Abdullah's 39-year-old husband also slipped out of the house and
ran to warn his cousins nearby. But he crossed paths with the Americans
on his way back; he died of gunshot wounds to the shoulder and head,
Abdullah said.
Seven family members were killed: Ali and his wife; their three sons
and a daughter-in-law; and their 5-year-old grandson. Only one of the
household's adults survived.
The Marines stopped next at the home of customs official Younis Salim
Nusaif, 45, his wife, Aida Yassin, and their six children. The
42-year-old Yassin was in bed that morning, recovering from a recent
operation. Her sister had come to stay with the family and help with
housework while she recuperated.
Everyone was at home when the troops arrived. And all but one
12-year-old girl were slain. Along with the parents and visiting
sister, four girls and a boy, their ages ranging from 4 to 15, were
shot by the Marines, said neighbors and the surviving child, Safa
Younis Salim.
During a meeting with a reporter, Safa, with a round face and big brown
eyes, was withdrawn and reluctant to talk about the attack. Only after
her relatives coaxed her did she describe how she played dead. The
Americans yelled in the faces of her family members before shooting
them, she said, then kicked them and hit the bodies with their guns.
The schoolgirl said she lay on the ground, covered with her sister's
blood, and pretended to be dead while her family died around her. Her
sister's blood spurted fast; it was like a water tap, she said.
"I feel sorry. I was wishing to be alive," said Safa. "Now I wish I had
died with them."
The troops moved along the street to another home. There, they killed
four brothers, whose ages ranged from 20 to 38, a woman from the family
said. First the Marines herded the women outside, pointed guns at their
heads and ordered them to stay still, said the woman, who did not want
her name published.
The men were grouped inside. Then the sound of gunfire rang out.
"After some minutes the soldiers ran out and left the house," she said.
The women went inside and found the men dead.
"They were shot in different parts of their bodies," the woman said.
"Spots of blood covered the place. Blood was coming out."
The last to die apparently came upon the scene by chance. Four
university students, two of them brothers, and their taxi driver drove
too close to the spot where the families had been killed. Witnesses
said U.S. troops stopped their car, ordered them to get out and shot
them.
When the killing was over, the Americans continued to guard the street,
keeping relatives away, townspeople said. Eventually, the troops took
the bodies to the hospital, a medical source in Haditha said.
Since that November day, the people of Haditha have felt haunted. The
survivors described sinking into depression.
Much of the talk has centered on the U.S. offer of $2,500 in
compensation for each death. Some of the families said they turned the
money down.
In March, the townspeople said, U.S. investigators arrived. They
brought cameras to record the witnesses' accounts, and toys for the
surviving children.
In contrast with the prominence of the Haditha story in the U.S. media,
the deaths have received little attention here.
Some Sunni Arabs allege that the Shiite Muslim majority simply isn't
very interested in the bloodshed in the mainly Sunni western provinces.
"The local satellite channels are affiliated with militias and Shiite
parties," said Omar Jubouri, head of the human rights office for the
Iraqi Islamic Party. "That's why they don't show the violations against
the Sunnis."
Others point out that Iraqis already have a tarnished view of the U.S.
military, that the notion of foreign troops killing innocent civilians
simply doesn't deliver much shock.
"It doesn't mean that much to hear that 20 people were killed by the
Americans," said Hassan Bazzaz, a political analyst in Baghdad. "Every
single day people are killed and thrown in the streets, in the garbage
cans. They're scared to death. They don't even have time to think about
what happened in Haditha."
*
A Times staff writer in Haditha and staff writer
Zainab Hussein in Baghdad contributed to this report.
Copyright 2006 Los Angeles Times