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Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
Iraq: a humanitarian crisis of catastrophic dimensions
By Kate Randall
19 March 2008
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Five years of the US-led war and occupation of Iraq have created
a humanitarian crisis affecting all aspects of Iraqi society.
This catastrophe is illustrated by the millions of Iraqis either
killed or displaced, the daily toll of death and violence, the
fracturing of families and communities, and the crumbling of basic
infrastructure and social services.
The destruction of Iraqi societyan act that the WSWS
has termed sociocidestands as one of the most
terrible crimes of the modern period, for which every faction
of the American political establishment bears a heavy guilt. This
brutal violence has been propelled by one basic aim: to advance
the interests of the American corporate establishment by seizing
control of Iraqs territory and material resources.
(See Five years after
the invasion of Iraq: A debacle for US imperialism)
The most stunning indicator of destruction in Iraq is the number
of people who have been killed. Last year, the British-based polling
agency ORB put this figure at 1.2 million, which substantiated
an earlier figure published in the medical journal Lancet by
scientists from Johns Hopkins University. Beyond deaths, however,
the daily toll of the occupation is present in the disintegration
of some of the most basic requirements of modern life.
Several recent reports document aspects of this tragedy. The
International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) has collected
together some statistics and interviews in a new study titled,
Iraq:
No Let-up in the Humanitarian Crisis. As the report
notes, Five years after the outbreak of the war in Iraq,
the humanitarian situation in most of the country remains among
the most critical in the world.
Many Iraqis have no access to one of lifes basic necessities:
clean water. A lack of qualified staff to operate and repair water
and sanitation facilities, exacerbated by rising prices and poor
security conditions, has led to a severe water crisis. According
to the ICRC study, many of these facilities have effectively collapsed
in some parts of Iraq. In some areas, large influxes of displaced
persons have placed additional strains on already limited services.
The average monthly Iraqi salary is now estimated at US$150,
according to the ICRC. This, however, refers only to those who
receive a salary. By some estimates, unemployment in Iraq is as
high as 50, 60, or even 70 percent. With drinking water costing
about one dollar for 10 liters, families would need to spend at
least $50 a month on water aloneor about a third of their
income. Facing this impossible situation, manyespecially
the most poorturn to unsafe water sources.
An ICRC water engineer in Basra commented, At night,
most people pump their water directly from the network. That makes
the water pressure drop too low to reach all the areas that the
network is supposed to cover. In addition, people sometimes pump
sewage, thus contaminating the water tanks they have at home.
The quality of the water supply is affected by outdated networks
of pipes that do not protect against contamination, the breakdown
of equipment and an unreliable electricity supply. The distribution
of chlorine, essential for sterilizing drinking water, is restricted
because it can be used in bomb making.
In many areasincluding parts of Baghdad, Salaheddine,
Diyala and Ninewauntreated water is pumped directly from
rivers or wells. Sanitation systems in many cases have deteriorated
to such an extent that drinking water is in danger of being contaminated
by raw sewage. This resulted in a widespread outbreak of cholera
in 2007, a threat that still exists.
Unreliable supplies of electricity and repeated power shortages
are widespread across Iraq. Parts of Baghdad, where temperatures
can reach 50 degrees Celsius (122 degrees Fahrenheit) in the summer,
have only one hour of electricity available a day. A similar situation
exists in Anbar province.
Abu Samer from Baghdad told the ICRC, To get six hours
of electricity per day by connecting to a private generator, I
have to pay at least $50 dollars [a month]. Sometimes
I have to queue for a whole day to buy 20 litres of fuel,
said Ibrahim Kassem from Ramadi. But queuing is dangerous.
You never know if there will be a bombing.
A number of factors contribute to the scarcity of electricity,
including insufficient supplies of refined fuel, poor maintenance,
the failure to carry out repairs to boost capacity, and sabotage.
In addition to the suffering of residents, the severe lack of
electrical power means water-treatment plants, hospitals and other
facilities need to rely on generators, which themselves often
fail due to a growing shortage of refined fuel.
Many Iraqis do not have access to the most basic health-care
services. The ICRC notes that there are presently 172 public hospitals
with 30,000 beds, while 80,000 beds are needed. Most of these
hospitals were built more than 30 years ago, and are in substandard
condition. Drugs and other essential items are also lacking. There
are some private clinics and hospitals, but these are unaffordable
for the vast majority of Iraqis.
There are not enough qualified doctors and other medical staff,
particularly in Najaf, Missan, Anbar, Wasit and Babil. Doctors,
nurses and their families are often threatened and are in danger
of being kidnapped or killed. According to Iraqi government sources,
more than 2,200 doctors have been killed and more than 250 kidnapped
since the US invasion. At least 20,000 of the 34,000 doctors registered
in 1990 have fled the country.
Another shocking index of the humanitarian crisis in Iraq is
the preponderance of refugees, both those displaced within the
country and those who have left its borders. An estimated 4 million
Iraqis, or 14 percent of the population, have been either internally
displaced or have fled to neighboring countries, where they struggle
to eke out an existence.
The Wall Street Journal reports that aid agencies estimate
more than 2 million Iraqis are now displaced inside the country,
due to both sectarian violence and fighting between US soldiers
and insurgents. About 60 percent, or about 1.2 million, of these
internal refugees are children.
According to the International Organization for Migration (IOM),
an average of 60,000 Iraqis were leaving their homes every month
in 2006, many of them fleeing to Jordan and Syria. The Iraqi Red
Crescent Organization says that there are still about 2 million
Iraqi refugees living in these two countries.
Facing mounting social costs from this influx of refugees,
Jordanian and Syrian authorities have begun to tighten visa rules
and are sending many back to Iraq, where they no longer have a
place to live. They must move into overcrowded homes with relatives
or find other accommodations.
The Red Crescent has built about 40 refugee camps across Iraq
since 2003, but these are basically tent cities, often with no
running water, electricity or proper sanitation and garbage collection.
The Iraq governments Ministry of Migration set up a few
other camps. Most of these camps are now shut down, and fewer
than 1 percent of displaced Iraqis currently reside in them.
Those displaced persons unable to move in with friends or relatives
try to find new homes in unfamiliar neighborhoods; some squat
in abandoned buildings. Many of these refugees are unable to take
advantage of aid from charitable agencies and are not registered
to receive food rations provided by the government. Most are unemployed,
putting increased financial strain on those family members who
can find work.
Thousands of Iraqi families have been torn apart, with many
losing their male breadwinners to violent deaths, incapacitating
injuries or illnesses. Many women do not know whether their husbands,
brothers or sons are alive, dead or imprisoned. Tens of thousands
of prisoners, the majority of them men, are currently in detention,
according to the ICRC. The largest detention center, Camp Bucca,
near Basra in the South, is run by the US-led Multinational Forces
in Iraq. It houses more than 20,000 inmates.
Violence continues on a daily basis, claiming the lives of
Iraqi civilians in sectarian bombings, and at the hands of the
US military and Iraqi police. According to the Associated Press,
from November 2006 to August 2007, an average of 65 Iraqis diedor
were found deadeach day from violence.
That number dropped to a two-year low this January, when an
average of 20 Iraqis died each day. These numbers have since begun
to climb. In February, approximately 26 Iraqis died from violence,
and so far in March that number has grown to an average of 39
a day.
These figures certainly underestimate the daily toll of death
and destruction, which continues every day. On March 3, two car
bombs killed 24 people in Baghdad. And on March 6, two massive
bombs claimed the lives of 68 people in Baghdads Karradah
neighborhood.
On Monday, a bomb exploded near the shrine of Imam Hussein,
a Shia pilgrimage center in Karbala. The death toll for that bombing
now stands at 52. The bombing coincided with a surprise visit
to Iraq by Vice President Dick Cheney, who commented on the US
operation, If you look back on those five years it has been
a difficult, challenging but nonetheless successful endeavor ...
and it has been well worth the effort.
On March 13, the London Timesonline reported the death
of a 10-year-old Iraqi girl killed by US gunfire in Diyala province,
north of Baghdad. US troops shot the girl after firing a warning
shot at a dirt mound where they claimed a woman had been acting
suspiciously.
The young girl was discovered behind the mound of dirt, suffering
from a gunshot wound. Soldiers treated her at the scene and called
for emergency assistance, but she died en route to the hospital.
Many similar civilian casualties undoubtedly go unreported.
See Also:
Iraq: Civilian casualties spike in February
[6 March 2008]
The US war and occupation
of Iraqthe murder of a society
[19 May 2007]
UN report: More than
34,000 Iraqi civilian deaths in 2006
[18 January 2007]
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