
BAGHDAD
The US has more dead and wounded
shoulders than claimed!!! Cooks and support is part of the army and has
not been counted. What a shame. BAGHDAD Constantine Rodriguez had
just fetched chili peppers and was going out to get some onions when he
heard the siren for an incoming rocket. All he remembers was a door
blasting open and a loud explosion.
A quiet man from the former Portuguese colony of Goa in southwestern
India, Rodriguez was working at a Pizza Hut restaurant at Taji, one of
the main U.S. air bases in Iraq, when he was caught up in an attack.
He is lucky to be alive, said Lieutenant-Colonel Matthew Martin, the
surgeon who treated him earlier this month at the 28th Combat Support
Hospital in Baghdad. Shrapnel took out an eye, pulverized one of his
legs and damaged his torso. He lost a lot of blood, but surgeons were
able to save him.
As he lay recovering in hospital, all he could think of was the new wife
he had left in India when he went to Iraq last year, and the 7
1/2-month-old baby he had never met.
"I had gotten the capsicum. And I was going to get onions," Rodriguez
said from his hospital bed. "I heard the siren ... What happened after I
don't know.
"I don't blame anybody. Just take care of me and my family. One leg. One
eye. What can I do with my family now?"
The Kuwaiti firm that employed Rodriguez, Al Homaizi, operates 11 Pizza
Huts, 13 Burger Kings and five Taco Bells on American bases in Iraq,
said Joe Petrusich, who runs the firm's Iraq restaurants.
It employs about 300 workers, recruited in Kuwait but nearly all from
poor countries in Asia: India, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Nepal and the
Philippines.
They are a small part of the vast army behind the army -- the tens of
thousands of "TCNs" -- "third-country nationals" -- hired to feed U.S.
troops, wash their laundry, build their compounds and clean their
toilets, for salaries of at most several hundred dollars a month.
The U.S. military says that by contracting out tasks like cooking and
cleaning, it can provide its soldiers with a better environment at a
lower cost.
CONTROVERSY BACK HOME
For poor countries, allowing their citizens to work in Iraq has been
controversial and often politically sensitive.
India has told its citizens not to work in Iraq since 2004, when three
Indian contractors were kidnapped and demonstrators took to the streets
at home complaining the government did too little to protect them.
But there is little a country can do to prevent its citizens taking work
that pays much better than jobs at home.
The Philippines now puts stamps in new passports saying they are not
valid for travel to Iraq.
Petrusich said the firm still employed Filipino workers in Iraq, as long
as they have old passports without the stamps.
Al Homaizi is Pizza Hut's franchise in Kuwait, with 45 restaurants in
that oil-rich Gulf state, where nearly all workers are recruited from
poor Asian countries. The firm offers staff at its Kuwait restaurants
double pay if they go to Iraq.
For Rodriguez, that was the equivalent of about $450 a month, enough
finally to find a wife and start a family back in India after 10 years
of working in Kuwait. The average per capita income in Goa is about
$1,100 a year.
Petrusich said Rodriguez would receive free medical care in Kuwait,
including physiotherapy and a prosthetic leg, and one-off payments
totaling 18,333 Kuwaiti dinars, about $55,000, if he is finally deemed
permanently disabled.
"I'm very close to these guys. I've known all of them. I know we do
everything we can," he said by telephone from Kuwait. "It's just an
unfortunate situation that has happened." Additional reporting by Kamil
Zaheer in New Delhi and Krittivas Mukherjee in Mumbai
The US has more dead and wounded
shoulders than claimed!!! Cooks and support is part of the army and has
not been counted. What a shame. BAGHDAD
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