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Orphans
now homeless after being driven from children’s homes…
children too scared of unexploded bombs to play in parks and
sport fields… patients being operated on without proper
hospital care or anesthetic. These are just a few accounts of
the horrendous conditions currently affecting children in Iraq.
Contrary
to reports from the Coalition media, the plight of children in
Iraq is worsening despite months of ‘liberation.’ This is
the view of Hani Lazim, committee member of the Iraqi
Democrats Against Occupation (IDAO), who describes
conditions in Baghdad and other areas of the country as
“chaotic.” He states that on all levels - healthcare,
medical, educational, and psychological - the children of Iraq
are enduring immense hardship and suffering.
Lazim
is one of many Iraqis who can recount personal horror stories of
the difficult conditions that now dictate how most Iraqis must
live. He tells of his nephew in Baghdad who waited for six weeks
before receiving any medical attention for a bullet wound. He
states that the health situation has deteriorated to such an
extent that most hospitals are almost no-go zones for most
people. “Only a few private hospitals are functioning properly
and the staff there have to spend their time on guard to protect
themselves and the facility.” The living conditions in Baghdad
are claustrophobic. “At night no one moves, roadblocks are
erected in the city at the whim of the US forces and non-one
knows where they are,” says Hani Lazim. He adds that the
roadblocks are manned by “trigger happy” troops who don’t
hesitate to shoot on sight.
Iraq’s
nightmarish scenario is having a direct impact on the welfare of
its children. The suffering that children endure under these
unforgiving circumstances is not receiving the attention and
moral support it deserves from the broader international
community. This is mainly due to reportage and media coverage
which in the main is being systematically filtered to present a
less troubling picture to the general public. Contrary to the
Coalition’s watered down version of events, Robert Fisk of the
UK’s Independent reports that “…almost 1,000 Iraqi
civilians are being killed every week - and that may well be a
conservative figure.”1
In
one of his recent articles, Fisk states that, while many people
are killed and injured through crime-related incidents,
Coalition raids and, more recently, ‘friendly fire,’ these
cases are not being reported. The occupying forces’ attitude
towards Iraqi life is illustrated by Fisk:
Even
when US troops on a raid in Mansour six weeks ago ran amok and
gunned down up to eight civilians - including a 14-year-old boy
- the best the Americans could do was to say that they were
“enquiring” into the incident. Not, as one US colonel
quickly pointed out to us, that this meant a formal enquiry.
Just a few questions here and there. And of course the killings
were soon forgotten.2
It
is a severe understatement to say that this makes for a very
unsatisfactory environment for children. Hani Lazim states that
the situation for children - even in terms of their natural
growth and development - is intolerable. “They can’t even
play soccer,” he states. “The reason for this is that,
because the sport fields and parks are not being maintained
since municipal services have ceased, the fields are overgrown,
and the high, uncut grass obscures the remnants of cluster bombs
used by the Coalition in defiance of international law. The
children are too scared to play normally,” says Lazim.
More
horror stories of the current situation are sketched by Lazim.
One particularly alarming account is that many orphans -
residing in school dormitories and other buildings - were
summarily evicted from the premises by US troops and left to
live “like animals on the streets.” There are an endless
number of similar stories and accounts of the suffering of Iraqi
children and their families.
Poverty
is widespread and is a major factor that affects the overall
status of Iraq’s children, adding to their escalating health
and social problems. Tara Swift, a member of Arab Media
Watch’s executive committee, has this personal account of
family conditions she encountered:
I
met a single mother with 6 children; she bakes bread to earn a
living. She told me about her life, or shall I say her survival
from one day to the next. She is just about managing to feed her
children. She depends on ‘hand me down’ clothes and shoes
for them.
The
extent and severity of the situation is further underscored when
medical teams and aid agencies have to leave the country due to
the increased violence and lack of security, taking with them
essential medical resources that the Iraqi children desperately
need. Mel Lehman, representing The
Children of Iraq Organization, is leading a group of
American doctors to Baghdad to help train medical staff. Mel
says, “I found the situation so chaotic and frightening that I
decided to postpone the October and November trips; clearly,
this is not a good time for a very visible group of 8 or 10
American doctors to be walking the streets of Baghdad.”
She
emphasizes that the increasingly volatile security situation is
having a dramatic and tragic effect on the country, particularly
the children.
I
think the single major issue facing the children of Iraq now is
the issue facing all of the people of Iraq: How to restore peace
to Iraq. The thing I really understood by being there is how
frightening the lack of security really is for people. As
important as the lack of electricity and phones and the
devastated economy is [sic], the real issue for the
children of Iraq and their parents is the lack of security.
Until we have social order in Iraq and end the chaos, the
children can’t grow up as normal, happy individuals in
preparation for their lives as adults.
Child
Healthcare in Chaos
According
to the Emergency Coordinator for Feed
the Children International (FTC), Ian Lethbridge, the
healthcare situation for children in Iraq is very serious:
“During
my
last visit to Baghdad in August, I visited two children’s
hospitals and witnessed hundreds of children who were sick or
dying from gastroenteritis, dysentery and cholera - mainly due
to drinking filthy, untreated water.” These conditions are
intimately linked to the general chaos and lack of civil
governance. There is no doubt, as many officials and medical
professionals state, that the situation has been worsened by the
occupation of Iraq and that the latter is the root cause of the
continuing plight of Iraqi children.
Lethbridge
sums up the past and present situations: “The nutrition and
health-care of children in Iraq have been affected over the past
13 years mainly due to sanctions; but I believe that many cases
of malnutrition that we are seeing after the war started a long
time before. For example, children’s immune systems have been
affected due to poor diet, mainly, lack of drugs and pediatric
medicines, and so on. The stress caused by bombing and trauma in
general exacerbates the suffering of children, especially those
suffering from asthma. This is worsened by the poor supply of
expensive medicines.”
It
is worth noting that at the time of writing this article FTC
International stopped its activities in Iraq due to the
intolerable security situation.
It
is a well known and often reported fact that the years of
sanctions severely undermined the ability of healthcare systems
to cope in Iraq. In essence, an already disastrous situation has
been exacerbated by the US-UK occupation. One cannot help but
reiterate the suspicions of many who are questioning why the
occupying forces - with the expertise, funds and equipment at
their disposal - have allowed the situation to decline as it
has?
Wolfgand
Friedl, Communications Officer for UNICEF,
adds to this assessment:
The
children of Iraq are caught up in war for the third time in 20
years. UNICEF is deeply concerned by the further deteriorating
conditions brought on by this war and their impact on the
children of Iraq. Almost half of the population is under the age
of 18. Even before the most recent conflict began, many children
were highly vulnerable to disease and malnutrition. One in four
children under five years of age is chronically malnourished.
One in eight children dies before their fifth birthday.
The
immunization of children is another critical healthcare area
that has been hampered by the poor security situation in the
country. Ian Lethbridge states that, while the immunization
programs were working well until April of this year, they have
now come to a halt. “I believe a lot of the cold-chains have
broken down.” The cold-chains maintain low temperatures,
ensuring that vaccines do not spoil. The resumption of
immunization programs, critical to the health of the very young,
is a priority for UNICEF at the moment. A spokesperson for
UNICEF states that “Some 270,000 children born after the war
have had no immunizations whatsoever, and routine immunization
services for all children were disrupted. The existing stocks of
vaccines in the country were rendered useless during the war
because the cold-chain system was broken.”
Bombs
and Toys
One
of the most serious residues of the recent war is the amount of
unexploded ordinance lying in waiting for unsuspecting children.
One weapon that not only causes immediate carnage but also
devastating after-effects is the cluster bomb; its very use in
this war is highly questionable under international law. One of
the first reports of the use of cluster bombs in the recent
conflict was in early April where civilians were killed in
Hillah, south of Baghdad. The scenes of carnage from the bombs
were deemed too awful by Reuters to be shown on television, but
the reports spoke of scenes of children with no limbs and babies
cut in half. Most of the 348 who were killed or wounded were
women and children.3
Cluster
bombs are incredibly destructive as they spray smaller
grenade-sized explosives indiscriminately over an area the size
of a football field. The danger at present is that many of these
live bombs are scattered throughout the country and, as they
resemble toys, they are often picked up by children, generally
with fatal consequences.
Another
danger that can have long-term implications is the use of
depleted uranium shells by the US military. Depleted uranium
(DU) is a potent radioactive carcinogen. Once absorbed by the
body, DU can produce cancer in the lungs, bones, blood, or
kidneys. An increasing number of cases have been reported of
children living in areas where depleted uranium weapons were
used who have now developed skin cancer. Children are very
susceptible to this radiation and are thus at great risk. Even
more frightening is the fact that depleted uranium has a
half-life of 4.5 billion years.
It
is also possible that cluster bombs and depleted uranium are not
the only dangerous weapons that would affect Iraqi children for
decades to come; there have been rumors and reports of an
unnamed weapon used by the US forces in their attack on Baghdad.
Tara Swift states, “All people I met [in Baghdad] are
convinced that a new deadly weapon was used in the last battle
for the airport. This is corroborated by the fact that the
airport was sealed by the Americans and the area was closed for
three weeks after the battle. More recently there have been
references to such reports in the international press. The
latest report was published in Turks US on July 17, quoting an
unnamed, well connected American military official as saying
that US soldiers who served around the airport are falling ill
and not responding to treatment. This could be the High Powered
Microwave bomb that the US had admitted it was going to
experiment on the Iraqis.”
Swift
adds another snippet of information that might have bearing on
this rumor: “My uncle’s widow, an orthodontist, told me that
anyone wishing to research different types of cancer should go
to Al-Mansour children’s hospital next to the city hospital in
Baghdad, where very rare cases of cancer are being diagnosed.
The hospital is full of children sick with cancer.” This is an
aspect that has received little in-depth analysis and presents
the possibility that the fallout from this war may be more
horrendous than many believe.
Psychological
Stress
Childcare
and aid organizations are absolutely unanimous on one aspect:
The aftermath of the war will continue to have a profoundly
negative affect on the psyches of children in Iraq. Ian
Lethbridge states:
The
war has contributed to a worsening of conditions for [Iraqi]
children in general. Post Traumatic Stress (PTS) is also very
common among [Iraqi] children as a result of the terror caused
by the bombing campaigns.
No
Prospect for Education
The
normalization of schooling is an essential element that can help
to improve the situation. However, the continuing security
crisis militates against this. Lethbridge states that
“generally all schools and tertiary institutions have been
greatly affected by either damage through bombing, looting or a
combination of the two!”
Tara
Swift sketches something of the changed situation for Iraqi
youngsters:
Everybody
is worried about their children’s future. When I was there
some schools had returned to ‘normal’ but many were in a
very bad state of disrepair, and many teachers were not turning
up for their jobs because of the bad security situation.
Secondary school graduates were appointed as teachers because of
the poor conditions and pay [due to sanctions].
Aid
agencies like the FTC and others understand the desperation of
the situation and are more than willing to help establish a more
normalized educational routine for the children. An FTC
spokesperson states, “The rehabilitation of schools is
something that we have been looking at in collaboration with
UNICEF but, due to the dangerous security situation, we can’t
get in at the moment to assess the area. Many schools need
rehabilitation, education materials, text books and equipment
like chairs, tables, etc. There will be no good prospect if the
international community can’t get in there, and the UN are out
also.” This situation has been dramatically worsened by the
recent bombing of the UN offices in Baghdad. Lethbridge fears
that, consequently, there will be a reduction in the amount of
assistance to the children. He also states that the UK and US
reportage underplays the severity of the situation. “I think
the worst thing that happened in post-war Iraq is the bombing of
the UN compound as now there is very little humanitarian
assistance of any kind, despite what US/UK military sources
say,” he says.
He
further states in no uncertain terms the effect that these
events have had on the Iraqi children and their families:
This
effectively ‘screwed’ millions of decent Iraqi families who
just want to get on with their lives post war. A month after the
war, families were frustrated at the lack of action from the
Coalition, two months after [in July] families were getting
desperate because they’d used up all their savings and
resources. Now they are taking the law into their own hands,
and, to be frank, they have no alternative in order to survive.
If my children were hungry or sick I’d most likely do the
same. For me personally, the greatest tragedy in Iraq is this:
We [the coalition forces] went into the war with no plan to
rehabilitate the country.
The
final word must go to Mel Lehman of The
Children of Iraq Organization whose recent visit to Iraq
- in an attempt to help the children - has resulted in a
personal reassessment of her personal views about her
country’s involvement in Iraq.
As
an American, I take a view somewhat different from that of my
country. I believe we need to set up a timetable for the United
States to get out of Iraq clearly stating the time when we will
turn the governance back to the Iraqi people, with the UN
serving as the interim role-player. Our present course is a
disaster; we’re proceeding under the assumption that more
American guns and more American firepower can ‘pacify’ Iraq.
The contrary, tragically, is true. Our projected policy will
only make things worse. There is no easy answer, but there is an
answer: The answer is for the US to clearly announce now how it
plans to leave Iraq and return Iraq to the Iraqis.
Gary
Smith is a
freelance journalist and researcher based in South Africa. His
special field of research is the situation in Iraq. You can
reach him at gary@imaginet.co.za.
[1]
Fisk, Robert, “Secret
slaughter by night, lies and blind eyes by day.” The
Independent September 14, 2003
[2]
Ibid.
[3]
Associated Press, “A
month later, cluster bombs remain deadly,” St.
Petersburg Times
May 18, 2003
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