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“Whereas
the child, by reason of his physical and mental immaturity, needs special
safeguards and care…”
“Whereas
mankind owes the child the best it has to give.”
Declaration
of the Rights of the Child, 1959
It
is a tragedy for the children of Iraq that the United Nations gave the power of
occupation of their country to the only nation in the world (apart from the
stateless Somalia) not to have ratified the Convention on the Rights of the
Child. We should not be surprised that in the past year the children of Iraq
have been subjected to every breach of human rights imaginable and that the
United States aided and abetted by Britain have shredded the most fundamental
tenets of our common humanity.
To
enter Iraq one year after occupation is like visiting another world. I remember
an April day in Baghdad two years ago, watching some young girls playing happily
and safely in the street outside their home, and praying that the US would never
invade this beautiful city. I don’t know where those children are now, whether
they are alive or dead, but even my fearful imaginings of that time could not
grasp the terrible reality that was to come.
The
children of Iraq now live in a permanent state of fear and insecurity. It is
difficult for the world at large to grasp that their situation is far worse now
than it was at the time of Saddam and sanctions. Looking back to Iraq of 2002,
it now seems a relatively golden era. Even those who suffered under Saddam are
now angered by the occupation. They are angry because in post war Iraq all
protection for the family and every semblance of security have been taken away.
Some are saying that the occupiers have managed to do more damage to Iraq in one
year than Saddam did in thirty!
Vicious
Circle of Poverty and Hunger
In
June/July 2003, the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) and the World Food
Programme (WFP) sent a mission to Iraq. They found that approximately 48% of the
population was food insecure and that while starvation had been averted, “chronic
malnutrition problems persist especially among vulnerable groups including
children and mothers due to a lack of nutrition diversity”.
They
emphasized that only a marked improvement in the economy as a whole would change
the situation because, although there was potentially enough food in Iraq, half
the population lacked the buying power for a sustained nutritious diet. This
was due to unemployment, chronic poverty and the absence of a head of household.
Now,
a year on, this situation has deteriorated on all three counts. Unemployment has
risen; many more men have either been killed or are detained in concentration
camps leaving women to fend alone, and chronic poverty is worsened by a
substantial rise in prices and the absence of any state subsidies.
A
Christian Aid survey of a poor area of Baghdad showed that two-thirds of poor
children no longer go to school. They are often kept at home to help their
parents. For some, the only household income is the food ration continued from
the oil-for-food deal - rice, sugar, flour, pulses, cooking oil, tea, soap and
detergent - the US have removed all dairy products except for infants, and even
one of these most basic items may be missing. It provides calories but virtually
no protein and no micronutrients.
Before
the war, a draft document leaked from the office of Coordination of Humanitarian
Affairs warned that the Iraqi people were far more vulnerable to any major
conflict than they had been in 1991. “Of particular concern are the high
levels of existing vulnerability and the dependence of most of the population on
the Government of Iraq for their most basic needs…All but the most privileged
have exhausted their assets and, in most cases, their cash assets.”
Now
the Government of Iraq has been dismantled and even people’s meager savings
are at risk from US looting. With no functioning banks, people are forced to
keep money and valuables in their homes. It is routine practice for US troops to
confiscate (i.e. steal) all savings, jewellery and valuables during their raids.
To give an example, Occupation Watch asked us to speak to a single mother with
three children whose house was raided early one morning. She had hidden her
savings under a cupboard, but the soldiers discovered it when trashing her home.
They took this along with her fourteen-year-old son who is now detained in a
concentration camp. She not only fears desperately for her son, but has no money
to care for her other children. This is a common event in occupied Iraq.
Health
System Dismantled
Perhaps
one of the greatest crimes of the Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA) has been
to dismantle an entire state apparatus, effectively unraveling the fragile
systems of survival for millions of people. All senior civil servants have been
dismissed as members of the Ba’ath party and now Iraq is administratively in
complete chaos.
The
Ministry of Health, for example, has been unable to provide a single hospital in
Iraq with any medication since the beginning of the occupation despite the fact
it now has a $3 billion budget. When Professor Khondah, head of the Gynecology
Department at Medical City, questioned the Ministry about this, he was told that
trucks of medicines paid for by the Iraqis were entering Iraq but were being
directed immediately into Iran and Turkey.
This
is not a small matter, especially as the occupiers are legally bound by the
Geneva Conventions to ensure “the food and medical supplies of the
population”. It is a disgrace to Britain and America that UNICEF is
reporting a rise in acute and chronic malnutrition amongst children since the
occupation that doctors are observing a significant decline in birth weight, and
epidemics of water-borne diseases such as typhoid and cholera are spiraling.
The
Reconstruction Farce
One
of the most illusive concepts in post-war Iraq is that of ‘reconstruction’.
In June/July 2003 we were shocked by the lack of electricity in Baghdad, the
pools of sewage, the bombed out buildings and bridges. In April 2004 nothing had
changed - except for the worse!
Some
NGOs are struggling to stem the deterioration with their limited means but where
are the great US corporations and where is all the money going? The only
construction we saw in Baghdad was concrete blockades and reams of razor wire.
Iraqis
are understandably confused and angry. Saddam’s regime, under the most
ferocious embargo, was able to repair buildings, bridges, roads, water systems,
electricity and telephone services in a matter of months. Iraqi engineers are
supreme in their ability to ‘fix’. The US with its seemingly infinite
resources has managed to do nothing at all, and in the meantime the people
suffer.
Children
succumb to water-borne diseases; in the hot months of the summer they cry all
night from thirst and in the winter there is little light or heating. The
destruction of Baghdad’s telephone exchanges means no communication and breeds
a terrible sense of fear and insecurity. Mobile phones now sell at $150 plus.
Few can afford them.
Wanton
Killing and Terrorizing of Children
If
lack of food, clean water and medicines are the silent killers, far more overt
and deliberate crimes are taking place. These include the indiscriminate
shooting of children, indefinite detention of children in concentration camps,
willful terrorizing of children and indiscriminate bombing and maiming.
Many
children are simply shot in cold blood. Amnesty International has cited the case
of an eight-year-old child being shot by a British soldier in Basra; an
11-year-old boy was shot by a drunken US soldier when she fired indiscriminately
into a market square from her tank; a four-year-old boy was shot dead for
playing with a toy gun outside his home in Baghdad; a mother and child were shot
in the head while climbing into an ambulance in Fallujah; a seven-year-old boy
was shot in the leg while sleeping in bed, resulting in its amputation, and so
the list goes on and on. These are well-documented cases.
Children,
as young as 11, are being interned in concentration camps without any legal
help. Often they are kept as hostages for their fathers or are detained in mass
punishment raids. A sixteen-year-old described to a Christian Peacemaker Team
how he was arrested with other male members of his family and was kept standing
in the sun (50°C) for two days with his hands tied so he could not drink. When
he pleaded for water, he was severely beaten. He was eventually released and
made to walk home in just his underwear, which was deeply shaming. His mother
says he now has constant nightmares.
While
UNICEF and other humanitarian bodies are questioning such treatment, it seems
that no one is asking why any child in Iraq should be interned at all - unless
it is to keep them with their families, in which case very stringent rules apply
under the Geneva conventions. We have on video an interview with the head of the
Red Cross in Baghdad last July, who told us bluntly that the Red Cross was bound
by an agreement with the US not to disclose anything it witnessed. He could not
even disclose whether or not the US was upholding the Geneva Conventions and he
certainly could not facilitate any legal access to a client. Considering the
appalling revelations of torture and abuse that are now emerging and that
children as well as adults are detained, this is of tremendous concern and
should be questioned at the highest level.
Children
are being terrorized by troops raiding their homes. During such raids they may
witness many forms of physical and verbal abuse, including the shooting dead of
family members. They are terrorized by tanks and blockades in the streets and by
violent behavior. US soldiers often shoot at cars indiscriminately. A doctor
told me how her friend’s husband was shot dead while driving his children to
school. The children were still in the car and when bystanders tried to take
care of the body, they were prevented from doing so. Another father was shot
dead while going to work in a taxi, leaving his widow with no means to bring up
the children.
Often
whole areas or villages are cordoned off. The children feel terrified and
trapped. In a telling report, aid-worker Helen Williams wrote: “In Abu
Ghraib, just outside Baghdad, no one has been able to leave/enter the town for
over one week because the Americans are blocking the roads. If the children see
a helicopter or tank attacking someone, the parents say ‘why, this is
democracy and freedom’ - the children are now scared of democracy and
freedom!”
An
Iraqi NGO called Childhood’s Voice has set up two centers in poor areas of
Baghdad, which work with local children and street children, giving them
opportunities to do art, music, and drama. They told us that the children come
with many behavioral problems including aggression, depression and anxiety. They
are responding to the work done at the centers but progress is very fragile and
can easily be halted or reversed by negative events.
The
massacre of Fallujah in April had a devastating impact. Hundreds of children in
Fallujah were killed, maimed, lost close family members, had their homes
destroyed and were left deeply traumatized. Many fled to Baghdad as refugees to
stay with relatives or to be housed in Red Crescent camps. They came with
terrible stories and no one in Baghdad was unaffected. It is generally believed
that every child in Iraq is suffering from some level of post- traumatic stress.
Rehabilitation
Faces Many Challenges
After
so much devastating military action, Iraq has an extraordinary number of
children with disabilities and there is virtually nothing in the way of
rehabilitation. Baghdad’s main rehabilitation hospital was seriously looted by
an armed gang last April and had 80% of its equipment and materials taken.
Nothing has been replaced. There is currently no material for making prosthesis
in Iraq.
In
March last year, 13-year-old Nagan heard a loud explosion and ran up to the flat
roof of her house to investigate. She stepped on one of the cluster bomblets
that had been scattered across her neighborhood and her leg was sliced off just
below the knee. She now has a temporary prosthesis, which she finds very
painful. She is too traumatized to go back to school.
In
July 2003, UNICEF reported over one thousand injuries and child deaths caused by
unexploded ordnance - many of them from cluster bombs - and noted 800 hazardous
sites in Baghdad alone. We were told by Help, a German/Swedish de-mining NGO in
Baghdad, that the US would give them no assistance in locating sites, let alone
help clearing them. Nagan’s district had been cleared by an Iraqi soldier and
residents had written a warning message on a wall. With 300,000 bomblets
showered across Iraq last year and more again in Fallujah, and with a 30%
failure rate, the toll will continue daily. Children, especially those under
five, are at greatest risk.
Radioactive
Children
The
director of the rehabilitation hospital also told us that apart from war
victims, many of his patients are children with cerebral palsy. This problem has
increased greatly since 1991 and he fears it may be due to the increase in
radioactivity following the use of depleted uranium weapons. Downs syndrome has
also increase by 4.5 fold and there is a steep rise in genetic birth defects.
In
Basra, childhood malignancies and leukemia were seen to have risen 384% and 300%
respectively in areas heavily contaminated with DU. In 1991 the allies used
around 350 tons in Southern Iraq and in this latest war the amount is unknown.
It could range from 200 tons to 2000 tons. Unless US weapons systems are
inspected, we may never know, but an increase in genetic illnesses and
malignancies in the next few years will give some indication.
Children
again are more vulnerable than adults to radioactivity and chemical toxicity due
to their fast cell growth, and as DU has a half-life of 4.5 billion years, this
could affect countless generations. Visiting a gynecology ward in a major
Baghdad hospital in April, we were told that there had been a marked increase in
congenital abnormalities in February and March of this year, almost a year after
the initial bombing. If this pattern continues, it deserves some serious
research.
If
anything has improved in post war Iraq, it is that cancer drugs and pain relief
are no longer sanctioned and are being provided by some NGOs. But with the
health system in disarray, a general lack of medicines, and patients often
unable to get to hospitals, many of Iraq’s children are unnecessarily sick and
dying. The environment in Iraq is heavily polluted from a number of sources and
as the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) has emphasized, in any matter
of post conflict clean up “timeliness is
paramount”.
Blatant
Unpreparedness
Iraq
is just one example of the hypocrisy of the West in regard to human and
environmental rights. Those who campaigned so vociferously against the human
rights abuses of Saddam Hussein are now silent in the face of a far worse
genocide. Many choose to ignore the fact that Iraq of the 1980s rose to 67th
place in the Human Development Index, had the best health care in the
Middle East and excellent education, with a virtual eradication of illiteracy.
The majority of children in Iraq, even under Saddam, had happy and healthy
childhoods. This is very far from the plight of children in 2004.
Even
if the war had been legal, knowing the vulnerability of the majority of the
population of Iraq and of its children in particular, the occupation should have
been prepared for. The failure of the US and UK to form any coherent post-Saddam
policy and to refuse to adhere to the international conventions they are bound
to is criminal. It shows a complete disregard for the people of Iraq and makes a
lie of any humanitarian concern.
The
children of Iraq are paying the price, not of conflict, but of a deep-seated
colonial mindset that we in the West have still not managed to discard. If we
are to stand by the human rights conventions we so seriously enacted after 1945,
then they must be seen to be applied universally. Let us collectively ensure
that they are applied in Iraq and that there is some hope and justice for
Iraq’s children.
Joanne
Baker is director of
Child Victims of War. She has been a frequent visitor to Iraq since 1999 -
initially to campaign against the sanctions and to research into the health
effects of depleted uranium. She has been to Baghdad twice since the occupation,
in June/July 2003 and from 27th March - 22nd April 2004.
Child Victims of War has been set up as a response to the dire situation of
children in Iraq since the war. Their particular concern is with the
environmental effects of warfare and the effects on children's health and well
being. In Iraq, they are promoting research into the health effects of depleted
uranium and aiding the rehabilitation of children injured by cluster bombs and
other unexploded ordinance. They intend their work to be community based and
welcome your support.
You can reach them at: info@childvictimsofwar
*The above article will be published in the next edition
of Third World Resurgence Magazine.
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