LAKEPORT, Calif., April 23, 2005

Slain War Victim Activist Buried

Sean Penn Calls Her A Hero; Death Puts Iraqi Orphan's Fate In Limbo

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    • Marla Ruzicka sits with Harah, an Iraqi girl thrown from a car after it was hit by a missile. This photo was sent in an e-mail to Ruzicka's parents 45 minutes before Ruzicka was killed April 16.

      Marla Ruzicka sits with Harah, an Iraqi girl thrown from a car after it was hit by a missile. This photo was sent in an e-mail to Ruzicka's parents 45 minutes before Ruzicka was killed April 16.  (AP (file))

    • Marla Ruzicka leads a demonstration calling for U.S. compensation to victims of the invasion of Afghanistan, in this April 7, 2002 file photo, outside of the U.S. Embassy in Kabul, Afghanistan.

      Marla Ruzicka leads a demonstration calling for U.S. compensation to victims of the invasion of Afghanistan, in this April 7, 2002 file photo, outside of the U.S. Embassy in Kabul, Afghanistan.  (AP (file))

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(AP) 
Bobby Muller, chairman of Vietnam Veterans of America Foundation, said the true value of Ruzicka's work was her ability to counter people's cynicism.

"Marla demonstrated the fact that an individual can make a profound difference in this world," Muller said. "This woman was our inspiration."

Ruzicka refused to accept the official line that the U.S. military does not keep track of civilian casualties, writing in an op-ed piece the week before she was killed that this position "outraged the Arab world and damaged the U.S. claim that its forces go to great lengths to minimize civilian casualties."

An Associated Press survey of deaths in the first 12 months of the occupation found that more than 5,000 Iraqis died violently in just Baghdad and three provinces. Since then, however, neither U.S. nor Iraqi officials have produced a complete tally.

Ruzicka thought she was close to uncovering the figures.

"Recently, I obtained statistics on civilian casualties from a high-ranking U.S. military official. The numbers were for Baghdad only, for a short period, during a relatively quiet time," she wrote in the article published posthumously in USA Today and posted on her Web site.

It wasn't clear if the deaths were caused by U.S. troops or insurgents, she wrote, but it was clear the U.S. military did actually keep track of the civilian dead. A U.S. official told her it was "standard operating procedure for U.S. troops to file a spot report when they shoot a noncombatant," she said.

The U.S. military did not immediately respond to her claims.

Ruzicka was on her way to visit an Iraqi girl injured in a bomb blast when she was killed, according to her colleagues from the Campaign for Innocent Victims in Conflict, the organization she founded.

As for Rakan, he now lies motionless on a bed borrowed from neighbors, staring listless and depressed at the walls of a bleak, dank room, waiting for help to walk through the door again.

Rakan's parents were killed when a U.S. military foot patrol fired on the family's car one dark, starless night in January in the border town of Tal Afar. The incident was widely reported, but Ruzicka was one of few foreigners to risk traveling north to meet Rakan and his seven siblings earlier this month.

Rakan said he felt sorry for Ruzicka's parents "because she cared about me. I should care about her family in return."

Still struggling with the loss of his own parents, Rakan said through a translator that he wanted to send a message to Clifford and Nancy Ruzicka, preparing to bury their much-loved daughter on the other side of the world.

"I say to her parents: God bless her soul, God give them strength to endure this tragedy," he said. "I lost her, they lost her and every poor Iraqi has lost her."


©MMV, The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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