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11-month-old
Iraqi girl Rosslal cries in a Baghdad children's hospital near her
2-year-old sister Aya while both suffer from gastroenteritis due
to poor drinking water
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BAGHDAD,
April 23 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) - For five days Samya
Ilihadi has prayed over her son like a machine at Baghdad's main
children's hospital, waving a cloth over his sunken eyes and swollen
belly to try to keep him cool.
Her
five-month-old boy Hassan is just one of thousands of Iraqi children
caught in a deadly outbreak of diarrhea and other infections which
have erupted in the aftermath of the war, Agence France-Presse (AFP)
said.
They
are being caused, especially in the capital Baghdad, by a vicious
combination of water contamination, electricity blackouts which are
rotting food, tones of garbage which have piled up in the streets and
open sewage.
Many
Iraqi children are also extremely vulnerable because they were
malnourished even before the U.S.-led war that toppled Saddam Hussein
because of the sanctions imposed on Iraq for almost 12 years.
Hospitals
looted by many under the nose of U.S.-led forces are also short of
medicines and supplies, and with the weather getting hotter,
infections are spreading like wildfire.
"We've
had a bad outbreak of gastroenteritis cases among children which can
make them lose all the water in their bodies and face death,"
doctor Ahmed Abdul Fattah said in a crowded ward at Al-Iskan hospital
in the west of the capital.
"About
70 percent of all the children who come through the doors of my
hospital are suffering from this," he said, gesturing to beds
filled with small bodies next to glassy-eyed mothers in black abaya
robes keeping vigils.
"In
the month before the war, we were already having about 75 deaths of
children suffering from diarrhea and chest infections. We're expecting
more this month, beside that many people have been afraid because of
the fighting to see a doctor even if they have diseases in their
houses," he said.
Many
More To Die
The
International Committee of the Red Cross said most hospitals in the
capital are returning to work at a diminished level, but other relief
groups have characterized the situation as "critical"
because of the lack of supplies.
Doctors
of Iraq and the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) are worried
the outbreak of infections will get worse before it gets better.
"Unfortunately,
we can expect many more young children to die rapidly," said
UNICEF's chief officer in Baghdad, George Hatim.
”Even
before the war, Iraqi children suffered from malnutrition so it is
quite serious. Now the water is contaminated and there is a lot of
pollution and the state of the hospitals is really very poor," he
said.
“We
can also expect malnutrition to rise to alarming heights from
widespread poverty, which is even worse because economic activity is
at a standstill,” he added.
A
team of Canadian health experts who visited the country reported in
January 2003 that 500,000 of Iraq's 13 million children were
malnourished.
Stateless
State
UNICEF
also found in 1999 that child mortality had more than doubled since
the Gulf War eight years earlier amid economic sanctions slapped on
Saddam's pariah regime.
"Humanitarian
groups can do a great deal but they cannot be a substitute for a whole
system," Hatim said, pointing out the United States has yet to
install a new government in Iraq.
"We're
talking about a whole population, we're not talking about a refugee
camp or an internally displaced population. Iraq is now in a sense a
stateless state and it is children who are now suffering and paying
the price."