
Iraqi woman Rahab Ali al-Musawi, 18, looks on while her three month old son Ali Mohammed cries during his treatment for diarrhea in the General Teaching Hospital for Children in Baghdad, Iraq (news - web sites), in this June 3, 2004 file photo. Ali, who prompted an outpouring of sympathy around the world after he was photographed lying emaciated in the undersupplied Iraqi hospital has died, doctors said Saturday June 19, 2004. (AP Photo/Anja Niedringhaus, File)
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Ali Mohammed Jabbar - affectionately known as Baby Ali - died of septicemia, a bacterial blood infection easily treated if more advanced medical care had been available, said Dr. Haidar Hadi of Baghdad's General Teaching Hospital for Children.
"The chance of survival would have been much, much higher if he were in a European hospital," Hadi said. "He most probably would have survived."
Baby Ali's suffering illustrated the plight of Iraq's children, who are still lacking proper medical care after more than a year of U.S. military occupation.
The hospital where Baby Ali was treated had no proper equipment to take blood and stool samples needed to pinpoint the type of diarrhea that afflicted him. Without that precision, doctors were unable to prescribe the right antibiotics for him.