PRAGUE, December 1, -- The head of a center for
Iran's disabled war veterans announced on November
26 that Iraq's former Ba'athist regime used chemical
weapons against civilians and soldiers some 300
times in the 1980s. Two decades later, still
suffering the long-term effects of chemical agents,
many of the 100,000 Iranian survivors of Iraqi gas
attacks continue to seek justice as they follow the
trial of former Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein.
They are described by many as forgotten victims of
Saddam Hussein. In many cases, they are soldiers who
fought in the bloody Iran-Iraq war in 1980-88. But
many others were noncombatants.
Iranian authorities have registered more than 50,000
victims of chemical weapons requiring special
medical care. But it is thought that about 1 million
Iranians were exposed to mustard or nerve gas during
the war.
Hossein Mohammadian, a resident of Sardasht in
Iran's Kurdistan, is among those victims.
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Former dictator Saddam Hussein
Photo : AFP |
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'A Special Smell'
Sardasht came under chemical attack months before
the March 1988 attack on the Iraqi Kurdish town of
Halabja, which became a symbol of Saddam Hussein's
brutality. But Sardasht received scant media
coverage, and was soon forgotten by many.
But Mohammadian has vivid memories of that hot
afternoon in late-June 1987.
"It was not the first time Sardasht was being
attacked, but the difference was -- and it became
clear later -- that it was a chemical attack," he
says. "Some of the bombs fell only a few meters from
me. I thought our house was destroyed and my parents
were under the rubble. I started running toward the
house, when I realized there was thick smoke in the
air and a special smell."
Several mustard bombs were dropped on the city,
contaminating some 4,500 people. More than 100
people died in the first month after exposure.
Mohammadian says neighbors began coughing and
suffering from blisters. Some vomited, while others
could barely open their burning eyes.
Eleven members of his family were seriously
contaminated. Mohammadian was in such a critical
state that he was transferred to a hospital in
Tehran, and then Madrid, for treatment. He learned
of his father's death only two months after the
attack.
Lifetime Of Pain
Mohammadian, now 46, is a senior member of a
nongovernmental group that tries to help Sardasht's
victims of chemical weapons. He tells RFE/RL that
the city still bears the scars of that attack nearly
20 years ago.
"Many people have problems, including respiratory
difficulties and weak nerves -- their immune systems
have become weak," Mohammadian says. "The reality is
that [scientists] have not yet found a guaranteed
cure for these victims."
Many have died of collapsed lungs over the years,
and others remain disabled.
Dr. Shahryar Khateri is a physician who has spent
time researching the effects of chemical agents on
Iranians. He says many survivors suffer from
psychological symptoms, including depression and
anxiety.
Khateri was 14 years old when he joined the war to
repel the Iraqi invasion, and spent three years on
the front lines. There, he witnessed several
chemical attacks.
"In one of them, nerve gas was used -- but we had
atropine cyanide injections and, fortunately,
because of that our contamination was not very
serious," Khateri says. "In another mustard-gas
attack, we were some distance from where the bombs
fell and we used masks."
No Forgetting
After the war, Khateri finished his medical studies
and got involved in drawing attention to the plight
of victims of chemical warfare.
He says many survivors have developed chronic lung,
eye, or skin diseases.
"This is one reason why we believe [chemical
weapons] are much more destructive than conventional
weapons --because even 20 years later, those who at
the time of the attack were not seriously injured
are slowly developing health problems," Khateri
says.
Khateri is now the director of international
relations at Iran's Society for Chemical Weapons
Victims Support (SCWVS). His nonprofit group helps
victims and is also active in peace exchanges and
efforts to eliminate unconventional weapons.
Khateri tells RFE/RL that Iran's victims of chemical
weapons feel the world has forgotten about them.
"There is talk of [Saddam Hussein's] crimes
everywhere, but there is not a word about the crimes
he committed against Iranians," Khateri says. "Sardasht
is the first city in the world to have been attacked
with chemical weapons. When it comes to Iran, this
issue has been affected -- maybe because [Tehran]
does not have good political relations with some
countries."
Khateri says many victims are glad to see Iraq's
former leader finally facing justice, but there is
also disappointment.
"I -- and also many other survivors of the war whom
I've talked to -- are happy that [Saddam Hussein] is
facing trial," he says. "But we are disappointed
that the attack against Iran and the use of chemical
weapons [against Iranians] have been ignored. I feel
this trial is not fair."
Unanswered Question
In Sardasht, Hossein Mohammadian holds out hope that
Saddam Hussein -- who has already been sentenced to
death for the mass killing of Iraqi civilians --
will also face prosecution for the use of chemical
weapons against Iranians:
Khateri wants to know as well: "Before his [death]
sentence is carried out, I would like him to answer
a question:
Why did he order the use of chemical weapons,
especially against the defenseless people of
Sardasht?"
In the minds of the tens or hundreds of thousands of
Iranians whose lives have been wracked by pain and
suffering since those chemical attacks, that
question deserves an answer.
rferl org
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