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The average Iraqi child now experiences diarrhea 14 times a year, relief groups.
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BAGHDAD,
January 5 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) – While the U.N. experts
Sunday, January 5, extended their hunt for alleged weapons of mass
destruction to Iraq's second largest city of Basra, CARE and other
humanitarian groups warned of "a disaster from a humanitarian
perspective".
Humanitarian
groups are most concerned about water and sanitation.
As
treatment facilities have deteriorated over the past decade, the
amount of drinkable water available to each Iraqi has fallen by half,
and disease has surged as a result, reported the Washington Post
Sunday, January 5.
Typhoid
jumped tenfold and the average Iraqi child now experiences diarrhea 14
times a year. Diarrhea is a killer here; respiratory ailments and
dehydration from diarrhea account for 70 percent of deaths among
children, it added.
As
a result, sometime in the next few weeks, 120 giant rubber bladders,
each able to hold up to 1,320 gallons of water, are scheduled to
arrive at the Baghdad offices of CARE, becoming frontline weapons in
the other war - the one to save lives, according to the paper.
If
the United States invades Iraq, any power outages would paralyze water
treatment plants, Majeed Waleed, deputy project manager at CARE, told
the Post.
Tanker
trucks that could be used to deliver water might be pressed into
military service, he added.
"So
we thought that by using these bladders we would transform regular
trucks into tankers," Waleed underlined.
Water
would be among the most serious concerns in the early days of any new
war in Iraq, but hardly the only one, according to CARE and other
humanitarian groups.
Iraq's
food distribution system, dependent on U.N.-administered oil sales,
would likely collapse, they anticipated.
Hospitals,
already short of medicine under U.N. sanctions, could become
overwhelmed by casualties. Diarrhea and measles could spread. And
hundreds of thousands of Iraqis could flee the fighting, warned the
relief groups.
Crisis
in The Making
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Iraqis sold parts of their houses or sold the whole thing and moved to a cheaper area, Waleed |
As
more U.S. troops get orders to head for the Gulf region and the
Pentagon readies its battle plans, humanitarian groups are preparing
for what they call a massive crisis in the making.
Ruud
Lubbers, the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees, recently declared
that war "will be a disaster from a humanitarian
perspective" for a country where conditions have already
deteriorated dramatically during two decades of war, strife,
repression and, for the past dozen years, economic sanctions.
U.N.
contingency planners estimated that as many as 4.5 million to 9.5
million Iraqis could need food from outside shortly after the
beginning of a war and predicted that as many as 900,000 refugees
could spill into neighboring countries such as Iran, Turkey, Syria and
Jordan.
Another
challenge for humanitarian groups is helping a population that is
significantly less able to fend for itself than during the Gulf War.
"There's
a big difference between '91 and now," said Waleed.
"In
'91, people had a cushion to fall back on. Don't forget, this was a
rich country. If they got married, they gave gold. They had three or
four TV sets... Now, of course, after 12 years anyone who ever got
gold has sold it. People sold parts of their houses or sold the whole
thing and moved to a cheaper area."
Three
weeks ago, U.N. relief agencies requested 37.4 million dollars to cope
with the expected crisis.
Tents,
blankets and medical kits have been stockpiled in places such as
Amman, the Jordanian capital, to be shipped in at a moment's notice.
Iran
has agreed to open another border crossing where humanitarian goods
could be brought in by truck.
However,
moving these supplies into the country could prove problematic once
fighting begins.
The
road from Jordan crosses the western Iraqi desert, where bombing cut
off traffic during the Gulf War of 1991.
Humanitarians
are optimistic that Iran will play a key role with two logistics
bases, including new roads into the Kurdish-dominated north.
But,
they are pessimistic about negotiations with Turkey, which wants to
seal its border during any war for fear of Kurdish refugees
instigating trouble in its territory, according to the Post.
In
the end, for all the planning by humanitarian groups, it may fall
largely to the Iraqi government to handle the humanitarian crisis.
U.N.
officials are preparing for possible evacuations of their foreign
staff, and many if not most of the local workers could be drafted to
defend their country.
U.N.
Experts Continue Search
Meanwhile,
the U.N. weapons experts extended their hunt for any trace of
suspected Iraqi weapons of mass destruction.
Iraqi
officials said that five disarmament teams went to work in Basra in
the south and the northern city of Mosul, as well as inspecting sites
around Baghdad, according to Agence France-Presse (AFP).
A
team of inspectors visited a site in central Baghdad that was not
immediately identified, according to officials at a press center run
by Iraq's information ministry.
A
team of missile specialists inspected the April 7 firm in Nahrwan, 20
kilometers southeast of Baghdad, while a third team traveled to
Ramadi, 100 kilometers west of the capital.
In
Mosul, a team inspected Ibn Sina hospital, while inspectors also
visited a center of oceanographic studies at the university in Basra,
550 kilometers south of Baghdad, officials said.
It
was the 37th day of inspections since the U.N. Monitoring,
Verification and Inspection Commission (UNMOVIC) and the International
Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) resumed work in Iraq on November 27 after
a four-year hiatus.
The
United States is threatening to disarm Iraq by force, but Baghdad
insists it no longer has any prohibited weapons.