IRAQ: Broken Lives and Broken Hearts
IRAQ: Broken Lives and Broken Hearts
According to a mortality survey published in the British medical journal The Lancet last October, as many as 655,000 Iraqis have died as a result of the U.S.-led invasion and occupation. The study was carried out last July, so the number is likely to be far higher today, after one of the bloodiest years of the occupation.
The occupation has impacted Iraqis' personal relationships the same way it has negatively affected all other aspects of life here.
"We were engaged to be married after the end of the war," Hussam Abdulla, a 28-year-old engineer from
Like countless other Iraqis, Abdulla's engagement never culminated in the marriage he'd hoped for.
Army officers, doctors, journalists, artists and others have been targeted by death squads since nearly the very beginning of the
"I thought the man I loved had simply dumped me," a 25-year- old woman who asked to be called Arwa told IPS. "He told me he would send for me as soon as he found a job in
She sadly told IPS that she and her family later found out her boyfriend, whom she had hoped to marry one day, had been detained by
When she asked where he was being held, "The U.S. authorities said his name did not exist in their files," Arwa said. "I will wait for him to appear even if it takes me a lifetime."
Tens of thousands of reportedly detained Iraqis are not listed in
"I told my fiancée to find herself another husband," 32-year- old Khalik Obeidy, who was visiting
"Getting married under such circumstances means more agony, and bringing up children is more than difficult," Obeidy added. "My crazy fiancée still has hope for improvement and she says she will wait."
Similar stories of broken-off engagements, postponed marriages and bitter separations are everywhere in
"In 2006, I sent my wife and two daughters to
Jassim Alwan recently made the dangerous trip from
"We have the 23-year-old Abdullah with his scruffy beard who keeps wandering the streets of
"The country of the 'Arabian Nights' and the wonderful poetry is no longer good for love," Maki al-Nazzal, a political analyst and poet, told IPS. "All Iraqi poetry under occupation is now about death and separation. Love stories are full of agonies and despair marking the darkest period of violence and hatred."
To date, there are no accurate figures available for how many men and women have lost wives and husbands in
"
(*Ali, our correspondent in


