http://www.lbbs.org/CrisesCurEvts/Iraq/iraqarticle.htm
IRAQ: AS THE PEOPLE SUFFER
By Rick McDowell
CATHOLIC WORKER MAGAZINE - Jan/Feb 1998
"The hidden nature of the war being waged against Iraq is
tragic. Editorials seldom appear, and we see no front-page stories, even though these
sanctions have caused the deaths of more than one million people, constituting one of the
greatest human rights abuses of our time."
Bishop Thomas Gumbleton
When I returned to Iraq in late May of 1997, nearly six months since
the implementation of UN Resolution 986 ("Oil for Food"), I expected to see
improvements in the availability of food and medicine. I found, instead, a deterioration
of all conditions necessary for the sustenance of life. Traveling to Iraq for the third
time in nine months, I encountered a resigned hopelessness amongst the people, a
population historically known for its resilience.
Seven years of the most comprehensive sanctions in modern history
have reduced Iraq and its people to utter destitution. The United Nations Security
Council's economic sanctions, invoked only ten times since the inception of the United
Nations, and applied eight times since the end of the Cold War, constitute an extension of
the devastating Allied bombing campaign of 1991.
For the 6th time since January of 1991 a delegation from Voices in
the Wilderness, a campaign to end the US-supported UN economic sanctions against Iraq,
traveled to Iraq in public violation of US law. The delegation visited hospitals in
Baghdad and the southern port city of Basra. Members met the UN and relief officials,
doctors, government workers, religious leaders, and Iraqis from all walks of life. Our
findings of increasing suffering, death, and desperation throughout Iraq are confirmed by
recent UN reports.
The UN Food and Agriculture Organization reported in December of
1995 that more than one million Iraqis have died --567,OOO of them children -- as a direct
consequence of economic sanctions. UNICEF reports that 4,500 children under the age of
five are dying each month from hunger and disease. An April 1997 nutritional survey,
carried out by UNICEF with the participation of the World Food Program (WFP) and Iraq's
Minister of Health, indicates that in Central/Southern Iraq 27.5% of Iraq's three million
children are now at risk of acute malnutrition. To date, more children have died in Iraq
than the combined toll of two atomic bombs on Japan and the ethnic cleansing of former
Yugoslavia.
The UN's Department of Humanitarian Affairs reports that Iraq's
public health services are nearing a total breakdown from a lack of basic medicines,
lifesaving drugs and essential medical supplies. The lack of clean water -- 50% of all
rural people have no access to potable water -- and a collapse of water treatment
facilities in most urban areas are contributing to the rapidly deteriorating state of
public health.
Airborne and waterborne diseases are on the rise, while deaths
related to diarrhea diseases have tripled in an increasingly unhealthy environment. The
World Health Organization (WHO) reports a six-fold increase in the mortality rate for
children under five, an explosive rise in the incidence of endemic infections, such as
cholera and typhoid, and a markedly elevated incidence of measles, poliomyelitis and
tetanus. Malaria has reached epidemic levels. The WHO further states that the majority of
Iraqis have subsisted on a semi-starvation diet for the past several years.
The use of depleted uranium during the Gulf War -- which may be a
contributing factor of Gulf War Syndrome -- may also be linked to increases in childhood
cancers, including leukemia, Hodgkin's disease, lymphomas, congenital diseases and
deformities in fetuses, along with limb reductional abnormalities and increases in genetic
abnormalities throughout Iraq.
The vaunted "Oil for Food" resolution is a failure, its
promise of food and medicine having proved to be too little, too late. According to the
WFP by the end of May, 1997, Iraq had exported 120 million barrels of oil and received
692,000 metric tons of food, 29% of what had been expected under the deal. Of the 574
contracts submitted to the Sanctions Committee for exports of humanitarian supplies to
Iraq, 311 were approved, 191 placed on hold, 14 blocked, and 38 were awaiting
clarification.
Of the $2 billion in Iraqi oil revenue authorized for a six-month
period, 30% is designated for war reparations, 5 to 10% for UN operations, 5 to 10% covers
maintenance and repair of the oil pipeline, and 15% is earmarked for humanitarian supplies
for the Kurdish population in northern Iraq. About $800,000 is available for Central/
Southern Iraq or approximately 25c per person per day for food and medicine. Regardless,
UN Resolution 986 does not provide for critically needed parts to repair Iraqi water
sanitation and medical infrastructure, which was devastated during the Gulf War. The
importation of such basic items as chlorine, fertilizers and pencils is prohibited.
Lacking spare parts and minerals needed to repair and maintain their
water and sewage treatment facilities, the condition of many Iraqis is scarcely improved
by the food they receive. The untreated water is contributing to disease and death.
Without hard currency. the economy of Iraq, estimated to have the second largest oil
reserves in the world, has collapsed. Average public sector wages, for the few who have
employment, have fallen to less than $5 per month, while hyper-inflation has caused the
price of goods to rise astronomically. The Iraqi dinar, worth $3 prior to sanctions, was
worth .000625 in May, 1997. Skilled workers, including doctors and engineers, have
deserted their jobs to become taxi drivers or cigarette salesmen. Iraqi professionals are
leaving the country in increasing numbers. With an estimated 80% of Iraqis affected by
sanctions, families are selling household and personal possessions to purchase food and
medicine. As the population struggles for survival, the social fabric of Iraq is
disintegrating, as witnessed by the widespread rise in begging, street children, crime and
prostitution. The people of Iraq have been on a roller coaster of hope and despair for
seven years and seem to have settled into despair. For example, Frial, the manager of a
small hotel, asked us to go home and tell our government to bomb Iraq for 32 more days and
get it over with, for, she says, "We are dying a slow and painful death under
sanctions."
A young doctor at a Baghdad hospital said, "Our life is
over." Another doctor, who has practiced for eight years and is forced to play God
with the few lifesaving drugs available makes 3,000 dinar a month, or $2, while a bottle
of milk for his children costs 3,500 dinars. He asked, "What does your country gain
from our suffering?" An Iraqi reporter despairingly stated, "the world is upside
down, nothing makes sense anymore, it's all gone mad."
Most horrific is the pain in the eyes of the mothers who wait in
hospitals, with their children -- for far too many mothers it is a death watch. The
children, born since the Gulf War and hardly involved in the politics of sanctions, suffer
in silence, often without access to pain killers, drugs, antibiotics or hope. Some
childhood cancers realized an 80% cure rate prior to sanctions. Now, without
cancer-fighting drugs, the survival rate for children with these same cancers is 0%.
The United Nations, chartered to protect civilian populations from
the ravages of war, is, instead, engaged in a war of collective punishment, a war of mass
destruction directed at the civilian population of Iraq. The UN, at the insistence of the
US, and contrary. to inter-national conventions and treaties, has created, in Iraq, a zone
of misery and death -- with no end in sight.
Considering the horrific suffering and death of children and
families in Iraq, the lack of public debate over the UN/US participation in this massive
violation of human rights is astonishing. The toll of these sanctions on an entire
generation of Iraqi children is incal-culable. What are the implications of Iraqi children
growing up traumatized by hunger and disease, if they survive at all? How can the deeds of
one leader or even an entire gov-ernment be used to justify this unprecedented,
internationally sanctioned violation of human rights? The scourge of sanctions on the
people of Iraq must come to an immediate and unqualified end.
[This January marks the seventh anniversary since the bombing of
Iraq in 1991. The devastating effects continue to harm the environment, agricultural
production and health of the Iraqi people significantly. Rick McDowell belongs to the
Chicago-based organization Voices in the Wilderness, whose goal is to end the US-led UN
sanctions against the people of Iraq. As we go to press, delegations from this group have
traveled to Iraq seven times since January, 1996, to deliver medical supplies and gather
information in open and public violation of US law. Participants in these groups have been
threatened by the US government with "up to 12 years in prison and $1 million in
fines."]