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Iraq
U.S., Iraqi Troops Rescue Orphan Boys
2007-06-20
Amazing that CBS showed this. Hat tip LGF.
(CBS) It was a scene that shocked battle-hardened soldiers, captured in photographs obtained exclusively by CBS News. On a daytime patrol in central Baghdad just over than a week ago, a U.S. military advisory team and Iraqi soldiers happened to look over a wall and found something horrific.

"They saw multiple bodies laying on the floor of the facility," Staff Sgt. Mitchell Gibson of the 82nd Airborne Division told CBS News chief foreign correspondent Lara Logan. "They thought they were all dead, so they threw a basketball (to) try and get some attention, and actually one of the kids lifted up their head, tilted it over and just looked and then went back down. And they said, 'oh, they're alive' and so they went into the building."

Inside the building, a government-run orphanage for special needs children, the soldiers found more emaciated little bodies tied to the cribs. They had been kept this way for more than a month, according to the soldiers called in to rescue the 24 boys.

"I saw children that you could see literally every bone in their body that were so skinny, they had no energy to move whatsoever, no expression on their face," Staff Sgt. Michael Beale said. "The kids were tied up, naked, covered in their own waste — feces — and there were three people that were cooking themselves food, but nothing for the kids," Lt. Stephen Duperre said.

Logan asked: So there were three people cooking their own food? "They were in the kitchen, yes ma'am," Duperre said.

With all these kids starving around them? "Yes ma'am," Duperre said.

It didn't stop there. The soldiers found kitchen shelves packed with food and in the stockroom, rows of brand-new clothing still in their plastic wrapping. Instead of giving it to the boys, the soldiers believe it was being sold to local markets.

The man in charge, the orphanage caretaker, had a well-kept office — a stark contrast to the terrible conditions just outside that room. "I got extremely angry with the caretaker when I got there," Capt. Benjamin Morales said. "It took every muscle in my body to restrain myself from not going after that guy."

He has since disappeared and is believed to be on the run. But two security guards are in custody, arrested on the orders of Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki. Two women also working there, who posed for pictures in front of the naked boys as if there was nothing wrong, have also disappeared.

"My first thought when I walked in there was shock, and then I got a little angry that they were treating kids like that, then that's when everybody just started getting upset," Capt. Jim Cook said. "There were people crying. It was definitely a bad emotional scene."

There was nothing more emotional than finding one boy who Army medics did not expect to survive. For Gibson, that was the hardest part: Seeing a boy who was at the orphanage, where Logan reported from, "with thousands of flies covering his body, unable to move any part of his body, you know we had to actually hold his head up and tilt his head to make sure that he was OK, and the only thing basically that was moving was his eyeballs," Gibson explained. "Flies in the mouth, in the eyes, in the nose, ears, eating all the open wounds from sleeping on the concrete."

All that, and the boy was laying in the boiling sun — temperatures of 120 degrees or so, according to Gibson. Looking at the boy today, as he sits up in his crib without help, it is hard to believe he is the same boy, one week later — now clean and being cared for along with all the other boys in a different orphanage located only a few minutes away from where they suffered their ordeal.

Another little boy right shown in the photos was carried out of the orphanage by Beale. He was very emaciated. "I picked him up and then immediately the kid started smiling, and as I got a little bit closer to the ambulance he just started laughing. It was almost like he completely understood what was going on," Beale said.

When CBS News visited the orphanage with the soldiers, it was clear the boys had been starved of human contact as much as anything else, Logan said. Some still had marks on their ankles from where they were tied. Since only one boy can talk, it's impossible to know what terrible memories they might have locked away. The memory of what he saw when he helped rescue the boys that night haunts Ali Soheil, the local council head, who wept during the interview.

Later at the hospital, Lt. Jason Smith brushed teeth and helped clean up the boys. He and his wife are both special education teachers, and he was proud to tell her what the soldiers had done. "She said that one day was worth my entire deployment," Smith said. "It makes the whole thing worthwhile."

This is a tough test for the Iraqi government: How a nation cares for its most vulnerable is one of the most important benchmarks for the health of any society.
Posted by:Steve White

#9  Too bad the soldiers would have gotten into a lot of trouble if they had just gutshot every adult in the building.
Posted by: Zenster   2007-06-20 22:59  

#8  If the Democrats take the White House? I have no idea, Jack is back. I hope they will see no alternative to staying the course President Bush laid out, but... I'm voting the WoT ticket until further notice.
Posted by: trailing wife   2007-06-20 22:08  

#7  Old Patiot, my aside on the 'Arab thing' was a NYT-liberal reference to the corruption, not to the inhumanity. And I do know that both characteristics are by no means limited to Arabs.
Posted by: Glenmore   2007-06-20 21:51  

#6  Ladies and gentlemen, don't be surprised. I saw such maltreatment in Vietnam, Panama, and here in the US of A. It's not an "Arab" thing, but a "human" thing. There are corrupt people who think nothing of doing vile things to children to enrich themselves. They don't deserve a rope - they deserve 20 strands of razor wire wrapped around their scrawny necks, and hanged from the nearest telephone pole until they rot. My wife and I became foster-parents because there ARE people like this in every society. We only stopped when we could no longer handle it. Now we're back into it, too old, too tired, but not immune to the need.
Posted by: Old Patriot   2007-06-20 13:40  

#5  TW: Do you think if the Dhimmicrats take the Potus and increase their lead in Congress we will be there for a generation? I sure don't and I don't buy the theory that you have get a dhimmicrat elected Potus to get them behing the WoT. They will bolt and turn our security and foreign policy over to the UN, EU and OAS before they assume any leadership responsibility. I mean that is their tendency now, past and in the future.
Posted by: Jack is Back!   2007-06-20 11:51  

#4  Glenmore, we're going to be there at least a generation, God willing. It'll take at least that long to change a culture going back to the bronze age.
Posted by: trailing wife   2007-06-20 09:11  

#3  SeeBS probably showed this because the concentration camp was run by Iraqis nominally on OUR side, not Al Quaeda or Iran. It's a valid point - corruption seems worse on the gov't side ("It's an Arab thing, you just wouldn't understand.") and associated disregard for human values seems not a whole lot different. Until these problems can be successfully addressed I have doubts about the prospects for overall mission success.
Posted by: Glenmore   2007-06-20 07:22  

#2  jesus did you see those poor kids... God Damn the islamic bastards responsible.
Posted by: Red Dawg   2007-06-20 04:29  

#1  ".....there were three people that were cooking themselves food, but nothing for the kids,' Lt. Stephen Duperre said."



STRING 'EM UP!
Posted by: Atomic Conspiracy   2007-06-20 02:15  

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