Marla Ruzicka, 26, from the San Francisco Bay Area, has been
in Baghdad since the day Saddam's statue fell in the city
center. She has been doing a headcount of the Iraqi injured and
the dead. She's found more than she expected.
She has formed her own nonprofit organization, called the
Campaign for Innocent Victims in Conflict, or CIVIC. She has
organized 150 surveyors to fan out across Iraq. So far, they say
they have documented 620 civilian deaths in Baghdad, 256 in
Najaf, 425 in Karbala and as many as 1,100 in Nasiriyah. It is
only a preliminary count.
"Somewhere between 5,000 to 10,000 people died in this
conflict," Ruzicka said.
Ruzicka's survey teams conduct their search door to door. On
Saturday, she visited the village of Rashidiya, a small farm
town on the banks of the Tigris River. On April 5, U.S.
warplanes strafed the village, killing nearly 100 people. All of
them were civilians.
In one house, 17-month-old Haider al Hamadi was the only
member of his family to escape unscathed. He lost his mother,
his three sisters and two brothers. His father survived, but
lost three fingers.
In another home, 42 people in one extended family were
killed. Many were visiting from Baghdad in an effort to keep
their children safe from the blitz.
"Each number represents a case, a need, represents a
father, a mother, a loss of life," she said.
Her Own Cause
Ruzicka does not represent the U.S. government. She's not
affiliated with any big relief agency. She is a lone peace
activist who has taken it upon herself to help the civilian
victims of war.
It is a difficult process, in part because there continue to
be casualties almost every day. But there is still no official
tally of how many Iraqi lives were lost — military or
civilian. Iraq's military kept all records secret. And the
civilian documents are unreliable.
Each hospital keeps a handwritten book of the dead. There is
no master list. And the hospital records are in disarray after
the flood of casualties during the war, and the looters who came
after.
Cemeteries are poorly marked. Many burials were not
documented at all. And it is difficult to tell the military from
the civilian dead because of the tactics Saddam's forces
employed during the war: dressing in civilian clothes, staging
in civilian neighborhoods, putting civilian lives at risk.
"It takes time, that's why we cant give you a number
today or tomorrow," said Ruzicka. "Our goal beyond
getting assistance to the innocent families that are harmed is
to get a proper accounting of war."
Offering Condolences
It is painstaking work, meeting one on one with people whose
lives have been ruined.
Ruzicka's task started in Amman, Jordan, two months ago. She
attended the funeral of the man believed to be the first
civilian casualty in this war — a Jordanian taxi driver killed
the first night of bombing. While the U.S. ambassador sent a
letter, she was the only American to personally offer
condolences to the grieving family.
Now, every day, she meets with new victims, in sessions that
often seem like group therapy.
"Yes, a number is important," she said, "but
it's not as important as making sure that we recognize that each
number is a life. Ultimately, we can get them long-term medical
care. We can get their homes rebuilt and possibly — it's a
hard possibility — but what we're working or is some economic
assistance."
Fighting for Compensation
The U.S. military says it does everything it can to ensure
that innocent civilians don't get caught in the crossfire. But
mistakes happen; war is messy. Ruzicka's ultimate goal is to win
compensation for these people, which is no easy task.
The only real precedent for compensating civilian casualties
comes from Afghanistan, and Ruzicka helped to make it happen by
successfully lobbying the U.S. Congress to help innocent victims
of that war.
In Afghanistan, Ruzicka's survey confirmed 824 civilian
deaths — although she believes at least double that number
died in the U.S. campaign to oust the Taliban and al Qaeda. She
convinced Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., to insert language in an
appropriations bill, allocating $3.75 million to help the Afghan
victims.
"Marla Ruzicka is somebody out there saying, 'Wait,
everybody. Here's what's really happening. You better know about
this,' " said Leahy. "We have whistle-blowers in
industry. Maybe sometimes we need whistle-blowers in foreign
policy."
But in Iraq, one person, however determined, is bound to have
trouble getting the attention of the U.S. military, which has
its hands full. Just wading through the bureaucracy can take
days.
Ruzicka is also chronically short on money. She now has $50
left in her bank account, so she is applying for a grant from
the U.S. Agency for International Development. Until that comes
through, she relies on the help of her friends.
But while other aid agencies are still getting organized in
Iraq, still tentatively working out the difficult security
situation, Ruzicka is already out there, trying as much as one
person can to help.
Marla Ruzicka can be reached at marlainiraq@yahoo.co.in.