Ethical Canons and Scientific Inquiry

Amiriyah shelter

An Iraqi girl. This picture is not a picture of an
Iraqi girl who was in the shelter at the time of
the bombings, but could have been. It is a
surrogate face of children who no longer
have one.
  PART I ETHICAL CANONS CONCERNING WAR
  Chapter  1 About Ethical Canons and War
  Chapter  2 Decisions Precipitating War
  Chapter  3 Human Sacrifice
Chapter  4 Amiriyah Shelter
  PART II ETHICAL CANONS CONCERNING EQUALITY
  Chapter  5 Slavery
  Chapter  6 Arens' Atrocity Attribution Theory
  Chapter  7 Genocide of Native Americans
  Chapter  8 Intermarriage
  PART III ETHICAL CANONS CONCERNING JUSTICE
  Chapter  9 Incarceration
  Chapter 10 Reemergence of Torture
  Chapter 11 Witchcraft Trials
  Chapter 12 Trials of Heretics
  PART IV ETHICAL CANONS CONCERNING RELIGION
  Chapter 13 The New and Old Testaments
  Chapter 14 Transplanted Mentality
  Chapter 15 God and His Messengers
  PART V ETHICAL CANONS CONCERNING EMPATHY
  Chapter 16 Karla Tucker and George W. Bush
  Chapter 17 A Girl with the Almond Eyes
  Chapter 18 Beyond Partiality: Building a World of Laughter and Love

A child's hand
burned into the wall.

 

 

 

 

Amiriyah shelter

 Many Iraqi civilians lost their lives when during the Gulf War, on 13 February 1991, at 4:30 in the morning, the Amiriyah shelter (also spelled Amiriya, Amariya, Amariyah) was hit by two laser guided bombs. 

 

 

 


but they were no match for the American laser
guided bombs ...

From the outside, the Amiriyah bomb shelter appears as a large, single story blockhouse made from concrete. The Iraqi government had built forty-four of these shelters around the city. They were designed to withstand a nuclear blast, but they were no match for the American laser guided bombs. 

The Amiriyah shelter is located in a poor, working-class neighborhood made up mostly of apartments. There are no nearby military facilities. There is a school across the street. 


Entry point of the guided bomb into the Amiriyah shelter.  

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Inside of the shelter, there is the large, circular hole in the ceiling where the first bomb came through. Underneath, there is a huge crater in the concrete floor. In the shelter there were no adult males--only four-hundred and eight human beings - women with their children. At 4:30 in the morning, most of the victims were sleeping in bunk-beds stacked along the walls. The first 2,000 pound bomb carried a shaped charge that cut through 12 feet of reinforced concrete and exploded, peeling away the protective cover.

As the second, incendiary, bomb exploded, it
carbonized people and the walls, creating
imprints of bodies, faces, hands, small
hands of children ...
.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Wall imprint of a mother holding her child.

 

Face burned into a wall

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Neighborhood residents heard screams as people tried to get out of the shelter. Shortly afterwards, the second bomb passed through the hole made by the first bomb. The explosion from the second bomb shattered doors and windows in homes around the neighborhood. The screaming abruptly stopped. The flash of the explosion was hot enough to sear foot- and handprints to the walls. Combustible articles--hair, clothes, blankets--caught on fire. When the rescuers opened the doors to the shelter, they saw scenes of incredible carnage. Nearly all the bodies were charred into blackness.

U.S. officials claimed that the blockhouse was a military communications center, but Western reporters have been unable to find evidence for this. Jeremy Bowen, a BBC correspondent, was one of the first television reporters on the scene. Bowen was given access to the site and did not find evidence of military use. [BBC 1, February 14, 1991].