http://www.albasrah.net http://www.albasrah.net/warcrimes.htm This seems to be liget
VIDEO EVIDENCE:
video of the testimonies by Geert Van Moorter, Fred & fico
The reality of iraqi children by Geert van Moorter & fico May 03, 2003
An Iraqi ambulance under fire by Geert Van Moorter & fico 2003-05-03
American soldiers shoot at a civilian bus in Iraq by Geert Van Moorter & fico 2003-05-03
Plundering a hospital filmed by Geert Van Moorter, edited by Chloé & fico April 24
American soldiers shoot at a civilian bus in Iraq by Geert Van Moorter & fico 2003-05-03
Plundering a hospital filmed by Geert Van Moorter, edited by Chloé & fico April 24
American's are like a baby by Geert Van Moorter, chloé & fico 2003-04-29
The feeling of an Iraqi doctor by Geert Van Moorter & fico 2003-05-03
We will build it again...and again...and again filmed by Geert Van Moorter, edited by fico & Chloé April 24
La voix des enfants de Charleroi à Bagdad by Huito & Fico 2003-04-30
This Dr. seems truthful from the site
Dr Geert Van Moorter, who was 2 months in Iraq during the war, in cooperation with SOS Iraq, has
returned from a six weeks stay in Baghdad. Here is his part of his testimony (translation in
English thanks to the International Action Center).
Greetings.
Dirk Adriaensens.
www.irak.be Six weeks in Baghdad under the occupation
Exclusive testimony of the Belgian Doctor Geert Van Moorter regarding the U.S. occupation.
Geert Van Moorter, a doctor in the Belgian organization Medicine for the Third World, who was in
Baghdad during the U.S. bombing in April, returned to Baghdad from the beginning of July to
mid-August.
Interview with Doctor Geert van Moorter, of Medicine for the Third World
by Pol De Vos , Parti Du Travail De Belgique
August 20th, 2003
Doctor Geert van Moorter, of Medicine for the Third World, returned a few days ago. He was in Iraq from the beginning of July until the middle of August. He offers us an exclusive insight into daily life under the occupation and the many forms that resistance takes.
President Bush says that life in Iraq is getting better every day. Was that your impression also?
At first you have the impression that things are more or less OK. Life goes on as normal. Many shops have goods for sale. Only the American jeeps strike a jarring note. But after evening falls, the illusion disappears. Before the war, there was a vibrant nightlife in the city. People would talk and laugh in the streets until 1 or 2 in the morning. Now, at night, Baghdad is a ghost town. The Americans decreed a curfew from 2300 hrs on.
I saw very quickly that the population still suffers from the effects of the war. The Iraqis just can’t understand why it is that, four months after the official end of the conflict, they still have electricity for only a few hours every day. There are huge problems with drinking water. Fuel supply is still seriously disrupted. Several people said to me that after the devastation of the first Gulf war, when most of the country was still under the control of the Iraqi government, all of these problems had been resolved in less than two months. Today, all of the administrative structure of the country has been turned upside down. Most public services and ministries have stopped functioning. The State enterprises have shut down. Hundreds of thousands have lost their jobs.
http://www.occupationwatch.org/article.php?id=574