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Start Seeing Iraqi Children

That children must suffer to such an extent because of perverse war games is a severe indictment against adults and those that orchestrated the war without assessing its potential consequences on that country's civilian
population.
War taking toll on health of Iraqi kids

More than two years after the Iraq war started, children continue to be its
main victims as the health of the majority of the population continues to
deteriorate.

In the 1980s, Iraq had one of the best health-care systems in the region.
Today it cannot respond to the most basic health needs of the population. In
1991, there were 1,800 health-care centers in Iraq. More than a decade
later, barely half remain and almost one-third of those require major
rehabilitation. U.N. Development Program's Human Development Index for the
country has fallen from 96 to 127, one of the most dramatic declines in
human welfare in recent history.

According to Jean Ziegler, the U.N. Human Rights Commission's special expert
on the right to food, the rate of malnutrition among Iraqi children has
almost doubled since Saddam Hussein's ouster in April 2003. Today, at 7.7
percent, Iraq's child malnutrition rate is roughly equal to that of Burundi,
an African nation ravaged by more than a decade of war. It is far higher
than the rates in Uganda and Haiti, countries also devastated by unrelenting
violence.

The population health problems are dramatically different than those facing
young Iraqis a generation ago, when obesity was one of the main
nutrition-related public health concerns. High rates of malnutrition started
in the 1990s as a result of the U.N.-imposed sanctions to punish the Hussein
regime for invading Kuwait in 1990. But following the 2003 invasion by the
'coalition' forces, the cycle of insurgent violence and occupation forces'
counterattacks have significantly damaged the basic health infrastructure in
the country.

Lack of dependable electricity and shortages of potable water throughout the
country have led to the deterioration of the population's health, resulting
in outbreaks of cholera and typhoid fever, particularly in southern Iraq.
The collapse of the water and sewage systems has probably been the cause of
an outbreak of hepatitis particularly lethal to pregnant women.

Presently, hundreds of thousands of children born after the war have had
none of their required vaccinations, and routine immunization services in
major areas of the country are all but disrupted. In addition, the
destruction of the refrigeration systems needed to store vaccines have
rendered the vaccine supply virtually useless.

Even antibiotics of minimal cost are in short supply, increasing the
population's risk of dying from common infections. Hospitals are overcrowded
and many hospitals go dark at night for lack of lighting fixtures. The Iraqi
health minister claims that 100 percent of the hospitals in Iraq need
rehabilitation.

To compound the problem, international aid organizations such as Doctors
Without Borders and CARE International have closed their operations in Iraq
because of the persistent threat of violence. Both groups have traditionally
had a high tolerance to risk, and have built a remarkable record of
cooperation with public health authorities in the country. Facing increasing
threats to their lives, doctors have left the country. It is estimated that,
in the past year alone, 10 percent of Baghdad's 32,000 doctors have left the
country or have stopped working.

Iraqi children not only have their health affected but also educational
opportunities as well. According to World Bank statistics, 25 percent of
primary school-age children do not go to school. Ministry of Education
statistics state that 80 percent of the schools in Iraq need repair and 9
percent are in need of demolition.

This is the third time that Iraqi civilians, mostly children, have suffered
the consequences of war in that country's recent history. The two previous
conflicts were the eight-year war with Iran in the 1980s and the Persian
Gulf War in 1991. This is happening in a country where almost half of the
inhabitants are under the age of 18. As a result of these public health
failures, Iraq is the country that has least progressed in reducing child
mortality since the 1990s.

That children must suffer to such an extent because of perverse war games is a severe indictment against adults and those that orchestrated the war without assessing its potential consequences on that country's civilian
population.
 
 

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