From victims to champions
By Khaled Diab
For
world leaders with doubts about the need to ban cluster bombs, courageous
survivors made a trip to
December 2007
Any government that believes it needs cluster
bombs in its arsenal should meet 16-year-old Suraj
from
Shortly after the US-led invasion of his country in 2001, he and his family were out
having a picnic to celebrate the Islamic new year in a
nice, tranquil spot in their village near
Unfortunately for Suraj,
the day was not destined to end as happily as it had begun. Semi-concealed in
the undergrowth was a small, yellow, canister-like object. The boy had barely
registered its presence before he stepped on it.
The cluster submunition,
or bomblet, exploded with such force that it blew
away both his legs and a finger. It also instantly killed one of his cousins,
and injured an uncle and two other cousins. Sadly, Suraj
is hardly unique. In
Hearing the loud explosion, police hurried to
the scene and rushed him to hospital. Rather than take him straight into the
operating theatre, staff placed Suraj in the hospital’s
makeshift mortuary.
When his father arrived shortly afterwards, he
was shocked to find his son, who still had a pulse, lying among the corpses. He
demanded that they save Suraj. “The doctors didn’t
want to treat me and wanted to give me an injection to end my life,” he tells
me, his sad brown eyes brimming with melancholy and the enduring remnants of a reluctantly forsaken childhood innocence. “They told my
father that I should die because I would be useless to him.”
This revelation caused me to fight back tears. But,
in Afghanistan, where there is no social safety
net, medical care is underdeveloped, more than half the population
live below the poverty line and two-fifths of people cannot expect to
live beyond 40, there is a cruel but totally inhumane logic to their reasoning.
But a family’s love is more powerful than such
ruthless pragmatism. The region’s top surgeon was summoned, and Suraj’s father worked every hour he could and borrowed from
family and friends to raise the funds for his son’s four-month hospital
treatment and the months of rehabilitation that followed.
In addition to the massive psychological trauma
caused by his injuries and his near euthanasia, Suraj
had a young boy’s conscience with which to contend. “I blamed myself for the
loss of my cousin and the injury of my other family members,” he confessed with
downcast eyes.
Unable to accept that a child should feel
responsible for a serial killer created thousands of miles away and dropped
from thousands of feet in the air by people who neither see nor care about the
consequences of their actions, I probed his guilt further. “Now I realise it’s
not my fault. It’s the fault of the countries which produce and use cluster
bombs,” Suraj acknowledges.
And it is for just that reason that Suraj has come to “[Cluster munitions] release up to several
hundred small bombs, so-called submunitions, leaving
a fatal footprint hundreds of metres wide. Within this circle of menace,
cluster submunitions indiscriminately kill and
injure,” explains Katleen Maes who led the team of researchers gauging the human
impact of cluster bombs. “Although cluster bombs are supposed to hit military
targets, research revealed that 98% of casualties are civilians – the
overwhelming majority struck while making a living or playing.”
Suraj recalls wistfully that: “Before my injuries, I
had a lot of dreams of what I’d do with my life. Now, as an advocate, I feel I
can do something ... I dream of a world free of cluster bombs and of helping
survivors everywhere to lead normal lives.”
And Suraj is not
alone in his quest to outlaw these weapons and improve the appalling
conditions under which the largely forsaken victims of cluster bombs live. He
is part of a group of survivors from
I met them all at a training weekend organised
by Handicap International Belgium to prepare them for their advocacy work, where
I had volunteered to interpret for the Iraqi survivor, Ahmed, and to help out
in the media training workshop.
According to Stan Brabant of Handicap International, these
advocates were to “explain to diplomats, [the] military and the media why the
Although each of the survivors had their own
depressing story to tell of unnecessary carnage and human suffering, their
commitment, conviction and determination – despite their physical limitations
and modest backgrounds – to help other survivors and prevent more innocent
civilians from falling prey to these indiscriminate weapons was truly
awe-inspiring to behold.
None of them had addressed diplomats, stood
before a TV camera or spoken to journalists before. One of them, Sladjan – a tough and amiable former deminer
who lost both arms while clearing cluster bombs dropped by NATO in Serbia – had, until recently,
cocooned himself in the loving and protective embrace of his wife and children.
He barely left the house because he felt too ashamed and self-conscious of his injuries.
But now he is ready and determined to take on the world and bring an end to
this mindless devastation.
The advocates, along with the Cluster Munitions Coalition (CMC), will have their work cut out.
On the plus side,
However, the biggest producers and users of
cluster bombs – the
Opposition revolves around the argument that
cluster bombs serve an important military purpose and that certain ‘smart’
cluster bombs should be exempted. “Cluster bombs serve no real military
function,” argues Branislav, an ex-Serbian deminer who lost his arms and legs while clearing cluster submunitions. “Most victims are civilians and I have rarely
seen a soldier get hurt ... Also, complete clearance is almost impossible. You
can never be sure that a place is completely safe after it is cleared.”
Ahmed, the Iraqi who lost most of his right arm
in an incident in 1991, is adamant that nothing less than a comprehensive ban
and adequate support to survivors will do.
“Stop procrastinating, enough debate – we need
action and we need it now,” he concludes.
This column appeared
in The Guardian Unlimited’s Comment is Free section on 6 December
2007. Read the related
discussion.
ă2007 K. Diab. Unless otherwise stated, all the content on this website
is the copyright of Khaled Diab.