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As the British forces declare taking Basra a military target, innocent civilians brace for a looming humanitarian crisis
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BAGHDAD,
March 25 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) - As the British forces
Tuesday, March 25, declared taking Iraq's southern city of Basra a
military objective after meeting ferocious resistance, the United
Nations has warned of a potential humanitarian crisis in Iraq's second
city where fighting is preventing aid reaching its 1.5 million
citizens.
Some
100,000 children are at risk of disease as the battle-scarred city
goes into its fourth day with disrupted supplies of drinking water,
the BBC News Online quoted a U.N. spokesman as saying.
According
to a U.N. official in Amman, many people in Basra are now taking water
from the river where sewage is dumped.
The
International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) has managed to restore
some of the water supply but only to less than half of the population.
The
ICRC said a humanitarian crisis is looming in Basra with more than a
million civilians have been without clean water or electricity in the
city since Friday as fighting rages outside, The Independent reported.
"This
is an emergency situation," ICRC spokesman Nadia Doumani said.
Florain
Westphal, also of the ICRC, said "We have not been able to gain
access to the main water station today, so we will try to do it
tomorrow. Sixty per cent of the population are still without access to
a regular water supply. This could develop into a humanitarian
crisis."
The
United Nations secretary general, Kofi Annan, made an urgent appeal on
Monday, March 24, for water supplies to be rushed in.
Annan
called for urgent action but, given the military situation, it will be
difficult for humanitarian supplies to reach the area in the immediate
future.
"Urgent
measures should be taken to restore electricity and water to that
population. A city of that size cannot afford to go without
electricity or water for long. Apart from the water aspect, you can
imagine what it does for sanitation."
"Military
Objective"
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British invasion forces declared Basra a military objective
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Outside
Basra, British troops pulled
back after they met ferocious resistance when they tried to enter
the city where the U.S. and Britain had predicted their forces would
be welcomed as liberators, reported the British paper.
But
the British forces said taking Basra has now become a military
objective in order to get humanitarian aid to civilians there.
A
spokesman for the British forces in Doha told al-Jazeera satellite
channel that the British forces do basically care about the Iraqi
civilians in the city.
“The
city inhabitants are prevented from welcoming the British forces by
some of pro-Saddam fighters,” he claimed.
Asked
how many days the invasion forces need to secure the city, the
spokesman evaded a direct answer, only saying "we carefully
assess the situation."
Some
British commanders concede that the Iraqis are dictating the battle
plan in Basra, playing their strongest suit by drawing the British
into urban warfare, the BBC News Online reported.
"The
British wanted to handle Basra as gently as possible - they hoped the
people would welcome them but this did not happen because of
resistance which came out of the city," it added.
The
first British combat soldier was killed during attempts to push in the
city and two others are still missing.
Iraqi
officials also affirmed that the city residents would not give up
resistance to the invading forces, as the government are sending basic
needs to the area.
"We
have 22 roads leading to Basra through which we send to the
inhabitants food stuffs and other needs. Every family in the city has
stockpiled supplies enough for a long six months," Iraqi Trade
Minister Mohamed Mahdi Saleh said in a press conference Tuesday.
Saleh
charged that the U.S.-led invasion forces are hampering delivering
supplies to the inhabitants, saying that ships carrying humanitarian
relief were seized by the American forces in Umm Qasr port.
More
"Child Deaths"
Desperate
civilians are drinking water from the river in Basra, the United
Nations Children's Fund joined in the warning as raw sewage is dumped
in the river roused fears of a disease outbreak.
The
UNICEF warned in a statement that at least 100,000 small children in
Basra are at risk of disease after the water supplies were cut on the
besieged southern Iraqi city.
"There
must now be a threat of disease as tens of thousands of people in
their homes, hospitals and care institutions attempt to cope and find
what water they can from the river and other sources," read the
statement carried by Agence France-Presse (AFP).
"Unfortunately
the river is also where sewage is dumped."
It
said children were most vulnerable to contaminated water.
"Not
only are they suffering from high rates of malnutrition, in Basra
there is the very real possibility now of child deaths, not only from
the conflict, but from the additional effects of diarrhea and
dehydration."
UNICEF
said it estimated that "at least 100,000 children under the age
of five are at risk".
Fadela
Chaib, a spokeswoman for the World Health Organization in the
Jordanian capital, said teams from the ICRC have restored the water
supply for about 40 percent of the population.
However,
she said this only partially met the city's needs.
"The
WHO is worried about the impact that the lack of access to potable and
clean water will have on the health situation, which could deteriorate
quickly."
The
Wafa al-Qaed water treatment plant, which usually supplies most of
Basra, has been out of action since Friday when the electricity cables
to the plant were destroyed.
As
the people in the city put up resistance to the invading forces, they
suffered a higher death toll.
Iraqi
Information Minister Mohammed Said Monday Al-Sahhaf said 24 people had
been killed and 411 injured in bombardments of Baghdad, Karbala, Basra
and Babel and another five
civilians, including a woman, died when a missile hit a
densely-populated area of Baghdad.