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Iraqi Children Robbed of Childhood

 
 
Reply Mon 3 Sep, 2007 06:45 pm
by Ahmed Ali
BAQUBA - The violence around the continuing U.S. military operations in this city has robbed children of their childhood.

Only two provincial schools and one private kindergarten school are functioning in this city of 280,000, located 30 mi. north of Baghdad. Most children know neither school nor play.

Or even the food they want. "We parents can hardly meet the basic requirements of food," Mahdi Hassan, a father of four, told IPS.

"Nobody even mentions chocolate or pastries or anything else because Iraqis know they are not important," Baquba resident Wissam Jafar told IPS. "Children eat what the other members of the family eat. Toys and games are offered only at festivals and on special occasions."

Baquba city, capital of Diyala province, has been at the center of major U.S. military operations to fight al-Qaeda like forces. People have suffered from the violence from both sides.

By now Iraq has seen a generation of children pass with just survival a major issue. During the period of economic sanctions imposed on Iraq in the 1990s, more than half a million children died, according to the United Nations.

In 1996, former U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright was asked by Lesley Stahl on 60 Minutes if she thought the price of half a million dead children was worth it. She replied, "I think this is a very hard choice, but the price - we think the price is worth it."

One in eight children in Iraq died during that period of malnutrition, disease, and lack of medicine.

The U.S.-led invasion of Iraq during March 2003 brought hope that things might change, but that change has only been for the worse.

"During the nineties, they were malnourished but they could find a place to play in the streets," Khalid Ali, a local economist, told IPS. "Nowadays, they cannot even get out of their home because of the violence. And a large number of children have been killed through the violence."

There is one park in Baquba with some basic swings for children; another was recently renovated by an Iraqi NGO. Both get overcrowded on festivals and holidays. Parents feel obliged to take their children out on these days, despite the risk.

On other days, no more than two or three families visit the parks.

Sajid Asim, who earns $175 a month from his job in the water department, says the money is barely enough for food for the family. "Surely, there won't be any extra money to bring the children special food or clothes, or games, or even taking them to picnics." For those without work - and there are many - the situation is worse.

Schoolteachers and managers spoke to IPS of the problems facing children who do manage to go to school.

"Teaching has been hit by the political situation in Iraq," said Salma Majid, manager of a local primary school. "Children can often not get to the school, and we may have more than three days off in a week. The whole academic year may be delayed because the violence has been so extreme this year."

"Schools can provide children a chance to play but sometimes it is not safe," she said. "A number of school buildings have been hit by mortar."

According to an Oxfam report on Iraq released July 30, "92 percent of children had learning impediments that are largely attributable to the current climate of fear. Schools are regularly closed as teachers and pupils are too fearful to attend. Over 800,000 children may now be out of school, according to a recent estimate by Save the Children UK - up from 600,000 in 2004."

The Oxfam report also said that child malnutrition rates in Iraq have risen from 19 percent before the invasion in 2003, to 28 percent. "More than 11 percent of newborn babies were born underweight in 2006, compared with 4 percent in 2003."

Scarcity has brought all sorts of difficulties for children. "I put a sandwich in the bag for my son to take to school," said a mother who declined to give her name. "When he got back home, he said he could not have it because his classmates do not bring their own sandwiches; their parents do not give them sandwiches."

A local primary school teacher, Ali Abbas, said it is common now for students to arrive at school without breakfast.

"One day, one of the children suddenly passed out," Abbas said. "We immediately took her to the administration room. When she regained consciousness, I asked her why she fainted. She told me that she did not have breakfast because there was no breakfast at home."

http://www.antiwar.com/ips/aali.php?articleid=11546
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cicerone imposter
 
  1  
Reply Mon 3 Sep, 2007 07:00 pm
The following article is dated April 1, 2005, but most of us know that more Iraqi children are going hungry today.

Moreover, the honorable men of the United States intended to deprive ordinary Iraqis of food and drinkable water through sanctions and massive bombing. During the Gulf War, Iraq's electrical grid was deliberately targeted by U.S. "smart" bombs in order to degrade the civilian infrastructure and accelerate the impact of the sanctions regime. In January of 1991, just before the start of the Gulf War and six months into the sanctions regime, the U.S. predicted that Iraq's ability to provide clean drinking water could not last more than six months. As a result, the U.S., with gruesome accuracy, predicted epidemics of cholera, hepatitis, and typhoid.

Having achieved their desired end of killing hundreds of thousands of Iraqi children, the U.S. then repeatedly blocked U.N. humanitarian projects aimed at alleviating the suffering it had created. The U.S. blocked international efforts to permit foreign companies to mill flour for Iraq to curb the unconscionable rate of civilian deaths from malnutrition. The U.S. also blocked efforts to provide Iraq with water tankers, arguing they could be used to haul Iraq's much-celebrated but never-located chemical weapons. The U.S. thus denied Iraqis access to potable water despite the insistence of UNMOVIC that tankers designed to carry water could not also carry chemicals.

In today's parlance, the U.S. blocked every effort to have Iraq's feeding tube reinserted.

The pious and the holy did not protest the deaths of hundreds of thousands of Iraqi children at the hands of the U.S. through its deliberate and calculated denial of food and water. Our sanctimonious elected officials did not pass ill-conceived and illegal legislation to end the suffering of Iraqi children. The falsely-pious pundits and politicians did not deem the starvation and thirst of the Iraqis sufficient bases to primp and preen before the cameras and congratulate themselves for being sufficiently familiar with the commands of the good book and the fundamentals of morality.

Instead, Saint George and his disciples, under false pretenses but with overwhelming popular support, decided to invade Iraq. The result? Sure, Saddam is gone. Good riddance. But unnoticed and unreported is that the already staggering rates of child malnutrition and child mortality have doubled and tripled, respectively, since the invasion. No demonstrations. No illegal legislation. No televised prayer vigils. Nothing.

What if Terri Schiavo were not white and Christian? What if she were, instead, a Muslim Arab? Would the self-righteous still have gathered outside her hospice and decried her court-sanctioned murder? Would they have given her a second thought? Would they have given her any thought at all?

Ken Sanders is a writer based in Tucson, Arizona. Visit his weblog at: www.politicsofdissent.blogspot.com/.
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blueflame1
 
  1  
Reply Mon 3 Sep, 2007 07:13 pm
Not forgetting either that Saddam was a CIA puppet for decades. Not forgetting the generations long bloody history of British Petrolium and Exxon in Iraq. link
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cicerone imposter
 
  1  
Reply Mon 3 Sep, 2007 07:54 pm
They don't sing "onward christian soldiers..." for nuttin.
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blueflame1
 
  1  
Reply Mon 3 Sep, 2007 08:06 pm
Talking about "onward christian soldiers..." they haven't neglected to persecute American kids either. link
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Ramafuchs
 
  1  
Reply Tue 4 Sep, 2007 10:45 am
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cicerone imposter
 
  1  
Reply Tue 4 Sep, 2007 11:07 am
It also fails to show that seven million more Americans are without health insurance. Whether the poverty rate stayed the same or improved from 2005 to 2006 is immaterial. You can bet your bottom dollar that many middle-class families without health insurance and has some huge medical bills will also fall into poverty.


Bush is more ccncerned with the war in Iraq and bringing democracy to the world than taking care of our own citizens with our tax dollars. Katrina, anyone?
0 Replies
 
Ramafuchs
 
  1  
Reply Tue 4 Sep, 2007 12:19 pm
Katrina
C I Katrina is nother typical example.

The destruction of New Orleans represents a confluence of many of the most pernicious trends in American politics and culture: poverty, racism, militarism, elitist greed, environmental abuse, public corruption and the decay of democracy at every level.
http://www.chris-floyd.com/
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