2006年VOA标准英语-Halabja Bears Scars 18 Years After Chemical Att(在线收听) |
By Margaret Besheer Halabja cemetery ---------- Halabja's streets are very quiet on a hot afternoon, lending an eerie feeling to this city which was destroyed in a single day. The attack on Halabja came in the last months of the eight year long war between Iraq and Iran. The town was a political stronghold of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan party, which had an alliance with Tehran. Many Kurds believe Halabja was a target because of that alliance. Abdullah says the next day, March 16, around 9 a.m. they heard reconnaissance planes above the city. About two hours later, he says, the first sortie of Iraqi aircraft bombed the city. He says the planes kept coming in 10 minute intervals for about nine hours. Sixty-five year old Mustafa says the Iraqi planes first dropped leaflets to see which way the wind was blowing. Then they began to bomb using napalm and rockets and finally the chemical weapons. Some victims are buried in Halabja cemetery He says he remembers an Iraqi air force plane was shot down over the Iranian city of Esfahan, and the pilot was paraded on Iranian television. He says the pilot said his mission was to bomb the city, with the intention of blowing out all the windows and doors of buildings, so when the chemical weapons were dropped, the gas would filter everywhere and no one would be spared. Mustafa says the bombs continued to fall as people fled toward the border. Inside Iran's border is the Sirvan river. He says those who reached the river survived, but many others were killed as they tried to reach it. Mustafa says he lost some 40 members of his extended family in the attack. Abdullah, who also fled to Iran with his family, says "while we were escaping, they bombed us, and there were bodies of Iranian soldiers and Kurdish villagers scattered everywhere." A street scene in Halabja Today, the town still bears the scars of the attack 18 years ago. Many survivors suffered terrible injuries and remain disabled. Others suffer psychological problems, and many children of survivors have been born with birth defects. Survivors say they hope Saddam will soon finally face justice for his crimes. |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2006/7/33443.html |