No More Victims

No More Victims works to obtain medical sponsorships for war-injured Iraqi children and to forge ties between the children, their families and communities in the United States. We believe one of the most effective means of combating militarism is to focus on direct relief to its victims.

If you want to learn more about how your community can become involved, send an email to No More Victims.

intro videointro videoCheck out our 2-minute video introduction to No More Victims' vital work.

Salee's Birthday PicSalee’s Coming to California!
Due to the current funding crunch both with NMV and Greenville’s Shriners Hospital, Salee Allawi will be coming to Shriners in Los Angeles for her follow-up treatment. Fundraisers are being held to help with her expenses, and we know California will give Salee another warm welcome! She should be arriving in mid to late July. Many thanks go to the people of the Greenville and Asheville areas, Shriners in Greenville, and the Ronald McDonald House of Greenville for their compassion & warmth, and for the love that they bestowed on both Salee and Rusul. Salee and Abu Ali love you all “BIG”! (and if anyone is in the Los Angeles area in late July or August, please let us know if you’d like to see Salee and her dad!)

NooraWHAT'S HAPPENING NOW

Noora’s May 4th surgery was a success!!! Noora and her father will be returning home to their family in Iraq in the beginning of June. Many thanks go to Susi Eggenberger and Doug Rogers, the lead coordinators of the NMV chapter in Maine. Susi and Doug were amazing caregivers and friends to Noora and Afef while they were here and we know they’ll be missed. Noora’s stay in the states was much longer than anticipated and we know she and her father are anxious to get home, but will miss all of the wonderful friends they met throughout the community. We wish them a safe and joyful journey!
Follow along with current updates!

Mustafa Ghazwan
Mustafa Ghazwan

Mustafa Ghazwan's sense of hearing was completely destroyed by a US air strike in 2007. He arrived in San Francisco with his father on New Year's Eve and underwent surgery to implant a cochlear device. The device was turned on and tested for the first time on January 29. Mustafa heard his first sounds since the air strike and intensive speech and audiological therapy is now underway. (Read More)


Mustafa Abed

In early November 2004, Mustafa Ahmed Abed, a toddler still in diapers, came down with a fever. He lived in Fallujah, a city in western Iraq that had been devastated by American forces in April, its medical system laid to waste. What started as a trip to treat s simple infection ended with the violent loss of Mustafa's leg and most of his hip in a US air raid. Doctors had to remove part of his colon, and now Mustafa uses a colostomy bag and cannot walk.

Read more of Mustafa's story and what No More Victims is doing to help him.

Rusul Allawe

Rusul

Salee Allawe’s little sister Rusul was injured in the same US air strike of November of 2006 that took both of Salee’s legs. The girls' brother Akram and several other children were playing outside their homes when the missiles struck. Akram was killed, as was Salee’s best friend. Salee lost both of her legs and one of Rusul’s legs was horribly mangled.
 

Nora

We received the following from Nora's father:

"On October 23, 2006, at 4 p.m., during Holy Eid, U.S. snipers positioned on a rooftop in my neighborhood started firing toward my car. My daughter Nora, a five-year-old child, was hit in the head. We rushed her to Heet General Hospital but she could not be treated there because the hospital lacked supplies and qualified doctors. We were forced to take her to Ninawa hospital, which is 600 kilometers north of my town...." [More about Nora...]

Salee (Sally)

November 7, 2006 – Hasswa, Iraq:  Salee, a nine-year-old girl, was playing outside her home with her brother, cousin and some friends. US jets circled overhead. Suddenly the jets fired three missiles, apparently at passenger vehicles. One missile landed where the children were playing, scattering her brother and best friend across the ground and taking both of Salee's legs.

Salee and her father have arrived in Greenville, South Carolina, and her treatment is underway. Her surgery was a complete success, and she's being fitted with prostetics. These medical services were unavailable to her in Iraq.

Thanks to the generosity of Shriner's Hospital and the hard work of community organizers Ann Cothran, Selena Franks, and the Upstate Coalition of Compassion, Salee is at last receiving the medical care she so urgently needs. She and her father are also deeply grateful to Robert Greenwald, producer Paris Marron, Brave New Films and Brave New Foundation for their generosity and support. (Read More)

Omar

January 9th, 2006 - Omar was traveling from Mosul to Baghdad with his mother, father, and brother to celebrate Eid. Near Samarra, their passanger vehicle came under fire from US forces. Omar's mother was killed. The driver and two other passengers also died at the scene.

Omar was severely burned and needs extensive reconstructive surgery. He's receiving medical treatment in Boston, thanks to the hard work of local volunteers and the generosity of Children's Hospital. (Learn More)

Abdul Hakeem

April 9, 2004, 11:00 pm - Abdul Hakeem was asleep at home when mortar rounds fired by US forces rained down on his family's home.  The attack occurred during the First Siege of Fallujah. His mother suffered abdominal and chest injuries and has undergone five major operations. His older brother and sister were also injured in the attack, and his unborn sister was killed. (Read More)

Alaa' Khalid

May 3, 2005   Alaa' Khalid was severely injured when a tank round slammed into her family's home in Al Qaim, Iraq. It was around three in the afternoon, and the children were having a tea party. Two of Alaa's brothers were killed, as were three of her cousins, all children under ten. Fourteen women and children were killed or injured in the attack, which occurred while the men were at work. (Read More)

Asraa' Mizyad

Asraa' Mizyad was severely injured in a U.S. missile attack on the morning of January 25, 1999. She had just finished a test at the Al Najed primary school and was walking home from school with two friends and a cousin when the missile struck. Her friends and her cousin were killed; Asraa' was the most severely injured survivor of the attack. A large piece of shrapnel severed her right arm below the shoulder and she suffered chest and abdominal wounds. A metal fragment remains lodged in her skull, a souvenir of the american empire; doctors could not remove it for fear of killing her. Asraa was nine years old. (Read More)

Mostafa

We brought Umm Haider and Mostafa - an Iraqi mother and her injured son - to the US in early April 2003. The bombing was well underway and the corporate media busily celebrated US military power. The boy received medical care and his mother had the opportunity to tell her story to the American public. It is a story about the death and mutilation of children, told by someone who has lived under the American bombs. (Read More)