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Iraqi
children celebrated the New Year by protesting U.S. aggression
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Additional
reporting By Aws Al-Sharqi, IOL Iraq correspondent
BAGHDAD,
January 1 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Five thousands Iraqi
children marked the New Year’s eve in Baghdad on Tuesday, December
31, by protesting against U.S. threats of military attack against
their country.
The
children, aged between five and 10 years, waved banners reading:
"No to the embargo! Yes to peace!" and: "So where is
conscience and humanity?" in Arabic, and: "Down, Down
USA!" in English.
The
crowd urged the United Nations to guarantee the rights of children in
the event of a U.S. attack, Agence France-Presse (AFP) said.
The
protest, which climaxed outside the Baghdad headquarters of the UN
Development Program (UNDP), also saw the young demonstrators release
white doves.
A
petition demanding to lift the sanctions on Iraq and stop the threat
of aggression was handed to the UNDP representative by Raghda, a
leading Syrian actress and a handicapped Iraqi child on behalf of the
demonstrators.
“I
came to participate in the demonstration hoping that the world and
(U.S. President George) Bush will hear my voice and stop destroying
and killing innocent Iraqi children,” an Iraqi child told
IslamOnline.
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A
petition demanding to lift the sanctions on Iraq and stop the
threat of aggression was handed to the UNDP representative by a
prominent Syrian actress and a handicapped Iraqi child
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Sarmad
Abdel Wahed said he left his brother, who has been suffering form
cancer for years, at home because he wanted to know why (UN
Secretary-General) Kofi Annan is silent.
“Why
is Kofi Annan silent about Bush’s crimes. I consider him a
collaborator in murdering Iraqi children because he is letting it
happen,” he added.
“Two
of my relatives died after suffering from many diseases without being
able to find the appropriate medicines because of the sanctions,”
another Iraqi child said.
“My
father told me that the UN is refusing to provide Iraq with food and
medicine causing thousands of deaths among Iraqis,” Sanan Saber
Ebeid said.
Nine-year-old
girl, Asmaa Garallah, said that she came to the demonstration to tell
the Americans: “We hate you because you are the enemy of children
and you are the cause of death of innocent people in Iraq, Palestine
and everywhere”.
“What
did the Iraqi children do to be punished by the U.S. with hunger and
illness. Do they leave their children without milk, food, and toys,”
said Hannan Abdel Altif Qassem.
“Where
are the Arabs and Muslims, why the Arab governments are silent while
people are killed on a daily basis,” she asked.
Official
statistics put at 1.6 million the number of Iraqis who have died as a
result of the 11-year-old U.S.-led sanctions.
"We
don't want war," U.S. religious leaders
Elsewhere
in Baghdad, a 13-member group of U.S. religious leaders led by the
National Council of Churches (NCC) visited a school in the Al-Kahira
district, protests against the U.S. plans to attack Iraq. They
delivering a primary class messages and drawings by children in the
United States and other countries.
"No
war", "War is not good", "We don't want war",
read the messages in English and French alongside crude drawings of
bombs, houses on fire and hands joined together in a gesture of peace,
AFP said.
One
eight-year-old schoolboy approached the group, which launched a
four-day humanitarian mission in Baghdad on Monday, December 30, to
say he had a message for it to relay to U.S. President George W. Bush:
"Why do you want to occupy Iraq? We are a peaceful people."
The
United States is preparing a massive military buildup in the Gulf and
has threatened to attack Iraq under the pretext that Baghdad has
nuclear weapons.
Baghdad
denies U.S. charges that it is still developing weapons of mass
destruction and the UN inspectors have not found any proof supporting
the U.S. allegations after more than a month searching in Iraq.