Iraq
Iraqis suffer a deadly toll
There is no official count of civilian deaths, but it's certain that violence has killed tens of thousands of Iraqis in three years.
By wire services
Published March 11, 2006
BAGHDAD - Three years into the war, one grim measure of its impact on Iraqis can be seen at Baghdad's morgue: There, the staff has photographed and cataloged more than 24,000 bodies from the Baghdad area alone since 2003, almost all killed in violence.
President Bush has said he thinks violence claimed at least 30,000 Iraqi dead as of December, while some researchers have cited numbers of 50,000, 75,000 or beyond.
The Pentagon has carefully counted the number of American military dead - now more than 2,300 - but declines to release its tally of Iraqi civilian or insurgent deaths.
The health ministry estimates 1,093 civilians died in the first two months of this year, nearly a quarter of the deaths government ministries reported in all of 2005. The Iraqi government, however, has swung wildly in its casualty estimates, leading many to view its figures with skepticism.
Baghdad, which has a fifth of Iraq's 25-million inhabitants, has been a center of the violence, with insurgent attacks and sectarian tensions both high here.
At the Baghdad morgue, more than 10,000 corpses were delivered in 2005, up from more than 8,000 in 2004 and about 6,000 in 2003, said the morgue's director, Dr. Faik Baker. All were corpses from either suspicious deaths or violent or war-related deaths - things like car bombs and gunshot wounds, tribal reprisals or crime - and not from natural causes.
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http://www.sptimes.com/2006/03/11/Worldandnation/Iraqis_suffer_a_deadl.shtml