Reuters Alertnet Foundation Logo
Alerting humanitarians to emergencies
 Username: 
 Password: 
 Sign me in automatically
About AlertNet  | Why join AlertNet?  | Help
You are here: Homepage > Newsdesk > Civilian War Victims Advocate Marla Ruzicka Mourned

Global Pledge-o-meter
Tsunami Aidwatch

LOW GRAPHICS
GET WEEKLY EMAIL
ALERTING


Weekly appeal
ADRA and NCC Unite in Cancer Battle in Ghana, Uganda, Burundi


Powered by SUN
Civilian War Victims Advocate Marla Ruzicka Mourned
18 Apr 2005 19:45:18 GMT
Source: Human Rights Watch
(New York, April 18, 2005) -- Human Rights Watch mourns the death of Marla Ruzicka, a tireless human rights activist working to provide compensation for civilian victims of war in Afghanistan and Iraq. The 28-year-old Ruzicka, founder of the non-governmental Campaign for Innocent Victims in Conflict (CIVIC), was killed by a suicide bomber while traveling on the Baghdad Airport road on Saturday. Ruzicka's colleague, Faiz Ali Salim, 43, also died in the explosion. Five others were injured in the attack, which seemed aimed at a security convoy driving ahead of Ruzicka's car. Human Rights Watch extended its condolence to the families of Ruzicka and Salim.

Ruzicka had worked extensively in Iraq and in Afghanistan to document the exact number of civilians killed or injured by U.S. forces, and helped victims receive compensation from the U.S. government.

During her last trip to Iraq, Ruzicka managed to obtain information from the U.S. military about the number of civilians killed during hostilities after the end of major combat operations. The information she received related only to a brief period in the Baghdad area, but was important in establishing that the U.S. did in fact record civilian injuries. She was trying to get the U.S. government to publicly release these statistics about all areas of Iraq.

"Everyone who met Marla was struck by her incredible effervescence and commitment," said Kenneth Roth, executive director of Human Rights Watch. "She was courageous and relentless in pursuit of accurate information about civilians caught up in war and her desire to provide some compensation to relieve their suffering. Her personal warmth and dedication made her a formidable advocate for her cause."

Ruzicka and her colleagues at CIVIC (nearly all local volunteers) worked to identify victims individually, gathering detailed information about the circumstances of their injury, their personal lives, and the impact of the war on them. This information was widely viewed as some of the most accurate data about the condition of civilians and helped put a human face on their suffering. Its reliability made it possible for many civilian victims to receive compensation.

Ruzicka began her work on behalf of civilian victims in Afghanistan in December 2001. As a result of her efforts in precisely identifying injured civilians, the U.S. Senate appropriated 2.5 million dollars to assist Afghans injured by U.S. action, a sum that has now grown to 7.5 million.

With the beginning of the war in Iraq, she expanded her own campaign there, and successfully lobbied the U.S. government to set aside 10 million dollars to compensate Iraqi victims.

Ruzicka was famous for her generosity in helping newly arrived journalists and aid workers unfamiliar with Iraq and Afghanistan. Her close association with Afghan and Iraqi aid workers and her tremendous respect for them established a standard for other foreigners working in those countries to follow. While she was well-known for eschewing personal comfort in pursuit of her work, she was even better known for organizing social gatherings that brought together local activists, journalists, aid workers, and government and military officials.

Ruzicka was scheduled to leave Iraq within a week. Ruzicka, who had decreased her time in Iraq due to security concerns, had traveled to Nepal in December 2004 to investigate the civil war raging there and to assess the possibility of expanding her work there.

"Marla's passion for her cause was obvious and infectious, but it was the accuracy of her data and the veracity of her information that made it possible for many others to rely on it," Roth said. "Human Rights Watch staff who worked closely with her in the conflict zones in Afghanistan, Iraq, and in the halls of Washington were all impressed by her. She was an inspiration to us all."

In an essay she wrote just a few days before her death, Ruzicka explained the significance of her work providing detailed information about the deaths of civilians in Iraq and Afghanistan: "A number is important not only to quantify the cost of the war, but to me each number is also a story of someone whose hopes, dreams and potential will never be realized, and who left behind a family."


Printable view  |  Email this article  |  Send comments

Iraq in turmoil

Afghan reconstruction


Small country map
© 2004 Europa Technologies Ltd.
Afghanistan profile
· View map

Iraq profile
· View map

Nepal profile
· View map


Iraqi judge shot dead in Mosul
Source: Reuters

W.House rejects lawmakers' call for Iraq pullout
Source: Reuters

IRAQ WRAPUP 1-Iraq rebels kill 5 marines in blast
Source: Reuters

Saddam defence team kept in the dark - chief lawyer
Source: Reuters

What's in the Downing Street Memo?
Source: Reuters


Towards a Lasting Peace in Nepal: The Constitutional Issues
Crisis Group - Belgium

Ambassador Richard C Holbrooke to give IRC-UK Annual Lecture
IRC - UK

Iraq: Don't Rush the Constitution
Crisis Group - Belgium

Global appeal for new treatments for neglected diseases launched
MSF International

Political Parties in Afghanistan
Crisis Group - Belgium


Disclaimers  |  Copyright  |  Privacy  |  Contact us  |  Feedback  |  About us
Thu Jun 16 21:43:20 2005