ملجأ العامرية Amriya Shelter

ملجأ العامرية أو الفردوس أو رقم خمسة وعشرين هو ملجأ من القصف جوي بحي العامرية، بغداد، العراق، قصف أثناء حرب الخليج الثانية. فقد ادت احدى الغارات الاميركية يوم 13 فبراير 1991 على بغداد بواسطة طائرتان من نوع أف-117 تحمل قنابل ذكية إلى تدمير ملجأ مما ادى لمقتل أكثر من 400 مدني عراقي من نساء واطفال. وقد بررت قوات التحالف هذا القصف بانه كان يستهدف مراكز قيادية عراقية لكن اثبتت الاحداث ان تدمير الملجا كان متعمدا خاصة وان الطائرات الاميركية ظلت تحوم فوقه لمدة يومين
The Amiriyah shelter or Al-Firdos bunker was an air-raid shelter ("Public Shelter No. 25") in the Amiriyah neighborhood of Baghdad, Iraq. The shelter was used in the Iran–Iraq War and the Gulf War by hundreds of civilians. It was destroyed by the USAF with two laser-guided "smart bombs" on 13 February 1991 during the Gulf War, killing more than 408 civilians.

الخميس، 17 فبراير 2011

Iraq shelter bombed by US remains frozen in time

Pictures of victims lie in dust inside Baghdad's Amriyah shelter, bombed by US-led allied forces in 1991
BAGHDAD (AFP) - Iraq shelter bombed by US remains frozen in time
The memorial at Baghdad's Amriyah shelter, bombed by US-led allied forces during the Gulf War in 1991
Bilder der Opfer liegen in Staub im Inneren Bagdad Amriyah Unterschlupf, von uns bombardiert geführten alliierten Streitkräfte im Jahr 1991
Bagdad (AFP) - Irak durch US-Bomben Zuflucht bleibt in der Zeit eingefroren
Photos des victimes se trouvent dans un abri de la poussière à l'intérieur de Bagdad Amriyah, bombardée par les États-Unis a conduit les forces alliées en 1991
BAGDAD (AFP) - Irak abri bombardé par l'US reste figé dans le temps
Iraq shelter bombed by US remains frozen in time
BAGHDAD: A bleak civilian bomb shelter where hundreds of Iraqis were killed by US missiles 20 years ago remains frozen in time, occasionally visited by relatives of victims who come to pray.
Pictures of victims lie in dust inside Baghdad's Amriyah shelter,
bombed by US-led allied forces in 1991. - Photo by AFP
The February 13, 1991 bombing of the Al-Amriyah bunker in western Baghdad during the first Gulf War killed 403 men, women and children. It hit world headlines and was trumpeted by Saddam Hussein as a symbol of US “barbarity”.

Until the dictator was toppled in the 2003 US-led invasion, each year on the anniversary of the tragedy Iraqi officials would make public appearances at the shelter, which had been transformed into a memorial and a propaganda tool.

But looters descended on the site after the invasion and the military closed public access to the memorial.

Yousef Abbas, who lost his mother, wife and four children when a pair of US smart bombs busted through the shelter’s reinforced concrete roof, said he hasn’t been back inside “since the beginning of the American occupation.” “When I pass in front I turn away because this place embodies the tragedy of Iraq,” said the 60-year-old, bursting into tears as he remembered the night that shattered his life two decades ago.

Occasionally, relatives of the victims show up to recite verses from the Koran, standing outside the perimeter wall that surrounds the bunker which now lies inside a military complex, said Abu Bilal, the keeper of the premises.

The opulent Al-Amriyah neighbourhood, where the elite of Baghdad had lived under Saddam, is a shadow of its former self, swarming with soldiers patrolling the now dangerous streets where al Qaeda fighters battle the rival Islamic Army, a Sunni Arab nationalist movement.

Inside the grim bunker, time appears to have stopped in 2003.

‘The crimes of America‘

From the outside, a long ramp descends into a crypt-like darkness toward a maze of corridors, where the street noise fades to silence. The smell of fuel suggests generators once lit the underground complex.

A series of thick blast doors suddenly open into a huge chamber, where a flood of light bursts through a gaping hole in the ceiling where the missiles exploded in a nose-dive that blasted the civilians hiding beneath.

The first smart bomb tore through the 2.5-metre (8-foot) thick roof, and a second followed with deadly force, transforming the shelter below into a fatal furnace.

A deep cavity in the floor, charred walls and thick pieces of mangled metal mark the force of that historic blast.

In the eight years of violence that have racked the neighbourhood, the protective glass canopy that once plugged the hole of the roof has also shattered.

The floors are littered with black-and-white portraits of the victims that once were on walls, but now are covered with cobwebs and dust.

In the dark, rare visitors trip over slabs of plexiglass on the floor, placed to preserve and display bloodstains and chunks of human flesh to the public when the memorial was open.

After the attack, during the Gulf War that pushed Iraqi troops out of neighbouring Kuwait, Washington maintained that the bunker was hiding a military command post.

“But didn’t the Americans have satellites to know that it was a civilian shelter?” Hussein Nasser, who lost his mother and five siblings in the bunker, asked incredulously.

“They knew very well who was inside, but they wanted to strike hard to overwhelm the Iraqi regime,” said the 46-year-old, adding that he was raising his three children to hate “the crimes of America”.

Outside the bunker, under a wall painted with the colours of the old Iraqi flag, hundreds of tombstones erected over mock graves are now covered with overgrown weeds.
http://www.dawn.com/2011/02/16/iraq-shelter-bombed-by-us-remains-frozen-in-time.html

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