Coalition forces, Kirkuk officials partner to care for bombing victims

  • Published
  • By Senior Master Sgt. Michael Land
  • 506th Air Expeditionary Group Public Affairs
The bright pink soccer ball was clearly out of place on the flightline here June 22; however, it was in just the right place to begin the healing process for a 9-year-old girl atop a stretcher being carried on board a Turkish air force C-130 to be aeromedically evacuated to Ankara, Turkey. 

She was the first of the 11 litter patients in all who were moved from ambulances up the ramp into the cargo aircraft.

Overall, U.S. and Turkish airmen, U.S. State Department officials at the Kirkuk Provincial Reconstruction Team, and Turkish Red Crescent Society medical responders helped coordinate and facilitate the flight for the injured victims of a June 20 suicide truck bombing in Taza District, south of Kirkuk city.

The ball was among the gifts, including stuffed animals, that Airmen gave children as they waited in the ambulances before driving on the parking apron.

In the wake of the bombing, the health minister of Iraq's Kurdistan region asked neighboring countries to provide aid for wounded victims following the explosion that left more than 80 people dead and more than 255 people injured.

In all, the Turkish government, PRT officials including an assigned Army civil affairs battalion, coalition forces including 506th Air Expeditionary Group Airmen and the 1st Cavalry Division's 2nd Brigade Combat Team, plus provincial leaders and relief workers stepped in to provide support.

The success of the aeromedical evacuation was made possible only thanks to the tremendous cooperation, extraordinary flexibility and rapid reaction of those involved, said Martin Aversa, a governance section head with the PRT. His sentiments were echoed by a local leader.

"Very great support, even from the first day," said Kirkuk Province Police Maj. Gen. Abdul Rahman Yousif Turhan as he stood at the plane's ramp door. "(Coalition forces were) the first out to give us support -- water, food, security and lights -- to allow people to work (at night)."

"This aerial evacuation demonstrates the close cooperation shared by coalition forces at Kirkuk Air Base with our Iraqi and Turkish partners," said Col. Eric Overturf, the 506th AEG commander as he watched the team effort. "No one on this ramp is arguing about politics or who to blame or who should get credit; they are just working together to help those in need."

Riding in the first Iraqi ambulance entering the base was Walide Abulah Tawfiq, who was responsible for managing the transfer of patients from Kirkuk General Hospital. After checking on his patient, who was on a gurney in the back, he said many of the victims flying out to Turkey suffered from broken and fractured extremities; some are in critical condition, and most are accompanied by family members.

Before the ambulances pulled up to the aircraft's open cargo door, Airmen, Soldiers, relief workers and aircrew helped unfold and stage stretchers to trans-load the patients and reconfigured the aircraft.

Among them was Staff Sgt. Steven Reed, who has been here less than a week and is assigned to the Kirkuk PRT's mission-support element.

"I'm adding my contribution to the fight against terrorism," he said. A volunteer on this hot day, the native of Ypsilanti, Mich., said he likes helping others.

Prior to the patients' loading, the Turkish aircrew and 506th Expeditionary Logistics Readiness Squadron Airmen downloaded three cargo pallets with 12 tons of relief supplies, including tents, blankets, kitchen equipment, food parcels and medical supplies. Many of these items were taken to the gate and handed over to a delegation from Taza, headed by its mayor.

(Senior Airman Jessica Lockoski from the 506th Air Expeditionary Group Public Affairs contributed to this article.)