"On average we have 28 bodies turning up every day - 90% of them victims of violence," he says.
"And we don't even see the people killed by explosions because they don't require autopsies."
Last month, his teams had to deal with over 860 bodies, some of them bound and shot in the head.
A significant number, he believes, have been murdered for sectarian motives.
And several had been wearing handcuffs.
Baker thinks they may have been killed by the Iraqi police.
Just another day in Baghdad.
It is even worse for the women of Iraq, who are now the target of Islamist who demand an acceptance of conservative standards.
Just as Iraqi women were anticipating a new era of democracy and freedom, a wave of intimidation by extremist groups has arisen to crush their hopes. Violent oppression of women is spreading across Iraq, a weapon of mass mental and physical destruction. And yet there is silence from world leaders, religious leaders, politicians and the media.
Insurgents and religious extremists use rape, acid and assassination to force Iraqi women to wear the veil – the symbol of submission, first signal of further repression to come. Many Iraqi women have never worn the scarf. Now, dead bodies of girls and women are found in rivers and on waste ground with a veil tied around the head, as a message.
As well as unveiled women, key targets are those who wear make-up, who are well educated and in the professions, and who work with organisations connected with the coalition forces.
Political Islamists target universities in particular. A male university professor told me about a bright, highly intelligent young student from Babylon University, Hilla, south of Baghdad. She had never worn the scarf. Despite death threats to compel her to wear it, she refused to do so and continued to attend university. She was raped and murdered. The professor spoke of the mess made of her body. He has since told his daughter she must either wear a scarf or leave university. He doesn’t want her to wear the scarf nor does he want her to leave university, but he is terrified for her life.
2 comments:
That just makes me want to cry. As a woman, I ache for them.
Oh yes, we have certainly made things better for the Iraqi people, haven't we?
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