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ICRTC worried about bodies in Fallujah
The International Committee of the Red Thingy Cross (ICRTC) yesterday expressed concern about civilians in Fallujah, where sewage is flowing in the streets and hundreds of bodies apparently lie in a warehouse since a US assault. The Swiss-based humanitarian group will provide tools and equipment to carry out basic repairs on damaged water treatment facilities and the sewage system, ICRTC spokesman Florian Westphal said. No date was set for delivery, but it was vital to restore the city's clean water supply to prevent disease, he said.
Feel free to put some gloves on and hoist away ... well okay, double-glove.
A team of seven ICRTC Iraqi staff, including engineers, entered Fallujah on Tuesday for the first time since the assault by 10,000 US troops backed by Iraqi units began on November 8. "Our team was told by the US army that there are several hundred dead bodies in a warehouse in the city," Westphal told Reuters, adding that the ICRTC team was unable to see the site, later described as a cold storage facility. "Obviously it is something we will follow up with a view to ensure that any human remains are properly identified and families are informed," he said.

ICRTC officials also saw "sewage flowing in some streets", according to the spokesman. Raw sewage and a lack of clean water can pose a public health threat, including diarrhoeal diseases. The ICRTC staff, who travelled from Baghdad for the day to Fallujah, held talks with local water and sewage board officials, as well as US army officials and the Iraqi National Guard. But they were unable to determine how many civilians remain in the city of 300,000 residents — ravaged by artillery, air and tank bombardments. "They saw very few people but apparently most people are staying indoors," Westphal said. Fallujah also lacks a functioning health facility as the hospital lies on the city outskirts and is difficult for people to access since it was used as a ammo depot by the terrorists and was thus blown to smithereens, according to the ICRTC spokesman. A small clinic set up in a mosque in the city was believed to have some limited supplies.
Posted by: Steve White 2004-12-11
http://www.rantburg.com/poparticle.php?ID=50983