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Beat up and shot on the job - all for $65 a month
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Abu Sadiq can reasonably claim to have one of the most thankless and
dangerous jobs in the world. He has been beaten up, he braves shooting every day
from all sides to do his work, and he gets paid a mere US$65 ($100) a month.
For Abu Sadiq is one of the city's 80 ambulancemen who risk their lives
constantly to bring the injured and dying to Al-Hkeem hospital, the only one of
the three main hospitals in Najaf functioning for civilian patients.
Abu Sadiq, 39, has been an ambulanceman for 15 years, but this is the first time
he has been caught up in a conflict in which both sides regard him as an enemy.
"The Mehdi army call me a traitor and say I'm with the police; the police
say I'm with the Mehdi army," he explains.
Three ambulancemen have been killed since the present battle began three weeks
ago.
Thirteen of the city's 32 ambulances have been destroyed. An ambulance at the
depot is riddled with bullets; blood is splashed on the inside of the doors; the
windscreen is smashed and a tyre is flat.
This ambulance, it turned out, was commandeered by the police and the two
officers in the front were shot dead by Mehdi insurgents.
Abu Sadiq says the event made the Mehdis more suspicious of bona fide
ambulances. Police regularly check ambulances for Mehdi weapons but, he says,
they also used another ambulance themselves to transport weapons.
How does he react to this? "It is a kind of oppression. They are using
us," said Abu Sadiq, who like many on the front line of this treacherous
battle prefers to give a familiar name rather than his real one.
Najaf police deny they use ambulances to carry weapons and accuse the Medhis of
doing so. Whatever the truth, Abu Sadiq knows all about the latter charge.
Two weeks ago, as he was returning to the hospital, he was stopped by police who
were suspicious because his delivery had been close to Mehdi positions.
He claims he was hit around his ear with rifle butts and left unconscious on the
street where he was found by a taxi driver. So why, after this, has he come back
to work?
He admits his family say, "Your life is in danger. You should stay at home
and Allah will help us to have a living."
But he says: "My job is a humanitarian one. I do it for the sake of Allah.
I would pick up injured Americans, injured Mehdi army people, anyone. That's my
job."
Would he not be better off working for the police at up to five times the
salary?
"No, because we are serving the people more than the police."
Yet for all the risks Abu Sadiq and his colleagues are taking, they know they
are saving only a fraction of the injured.
Ambulances cannot usually penetrate the area around the Imam Ali shrine, at the
heart of the fighting. Although 90 per cent of the patients at al-Hkeem are
war-wounded, many others, says a volunteer from Baghdad, are still deep in the
old city, "bleeding until they die".
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