1.6 Million Iraqi Children have died.. (merged)

“The hospital’s director, Dr. Luay Kasha, said that since the sanctions were introduced, 1.6 million Iraqi children have died, up to seven times more than in the same period before the sanctions. This corresponds with U.N. figures, which also mention that more than a million Iraqi children are malnourished.”

Iraqi Children Suffer Amid War Fears http://216.239.53.100/search?q=cache:eVbblDmaVDsC:www.newsday.com/news/

By DUSAN STOJANOVIC Associated Press Writer, November 4 2002

**BAGHDAD, Iraq – Emira was a day old when she was abandoned by her parents, who couldn’t afford to keep her. She is one of tens of thousands of Iraqi children suffering under U.N. sanctions and the Arab country’s general downslide amid fears of a new war. Emira was taken from the hospital where she was born Saturday and placed in a drab Baghdad orphanage, one of Iraqi capital’s four which house thousands of children. Many were abandoned by their families while others lost both their parents, some during the Gulf War. **

“We have a dramatic increase in orphans here,” said Aneeba Jabar, the director of the Al-Najat orphanage on the garbage-strewn banks of the Tigris River on the outskirts of Baghdad. She blamed it on United Nations sanctions imposed on Iraq in 1990, speaking as a government minder monitored an interview.

“We had two orphanages in Baghdad before the sanctions and the (Gulf) war. Now, we have four because the old ones became too crowded,” Jabar said, as Emira sucked formula from a bottle. She shared her small bed with another, pale-looking infant. “Emira’s mother simply fled the hospital because the family has no money to feed her,” Jabar said. She would not provide the exact number of orphans in Baghdad “because their number is soaring daily.”

U.S. and United Nations officials have repeatedly rejected complaints about the humanitarian impact of the sanctions, saying the sanctions could be eliminated if Iraq complies with demands that it prove it has eliminated its weapons of mass destruction. The United Nations has also criticized Iraq for spending only a tiny fraction of its U.N.-approved oil proceeds on improving nutrition for children. Also, medicine and food have never been prohibited under the sanctions.

Many people in Iraq live below the poverty line, and as a result, families who cannot afford to feed and clothe their children are forced to give them up. Since 1990, when Iraq was one of the most prosperous Arab nations because of huge oil reserves, living standards have plummeted, and average monthly salaries dropped from the equivalent of $500 to $10.

Washington has renewed accusations that Iraq is developing weapons of mass destruction in violation of U.N. orders and of sponsoring terrorists. President Bush is pushing the United Nations for a tough resolution that would allow an attack on Iraq, but has threatened to act alone if the Security Council doesn’t go along.

That is why the basement at Baghdad’s Al-Mansour Teaching Hospital for Children is being prepared to shelter 200 young cancer patients, their families and medical staff in case of a new war. The hospital took similar precautions during the 1991 Gulf War that was launched by a U.S.-led coalition to drive Iraqi forces from Kuwait. The hospital was not hit during that war and is not near any military installations, but is preparing for a hit by a stray missile.

But fears of American strikes are not the only problems the Iraqi health system faces. The hospital’s director, Dr. Luay Kasha, said that since the sanctions were introduced, 1.6 million Iraqi children have died, up to seven times more than in the same period before the sanctions. This corresponds with U.N. figures, which also mention that more than a million Iraqi children are malnourished. Kasha said the American use of depleted uranium in its munitions during the Gulf War was probably to blame. “After that there was shortage in supply of proper food and medicines … after that, epidemics flared up, cholera, virus infections, tuberculosis, chest infections, skin infections, water-born diseases.”

“We are now reporting five to seven times increase of cancer cases among children than before 1990,” Kasha said, an Iraqi government minder also present as she spoke. “Most of the cases were caused by radiation … like leukemia.” The Americans have challenged such claims and insist that there is no proven link between use of depleted uranium munitions and the diseases.

Emin Fellah, a 5-year-boy pale boy of bare bones and skin, is dying of leukemia, and his mother Fatima watches him with teary eyes. “If we had proper medicines, he might have had a chance,” said Dr. Lana Ahmed. “But with the situation like this, we had to abandon his therapy”

Goddamn Saddam and his cronies. We need the US to go in and liberate the poor Iraqi people. And save some lives.

What CH forgot to mention is that the Sanctions were a gift from Bush & Co to the Iraqi people after Operation Desert Storm.

What DHP forgot to mention that the sanctions were a gift from the UN not Bush and co. The gift from Bush and co. was a thorough ass whupping that was provided to the vaunte Iraqi army and which will be repeated soon to liberate all the people of Iraq.

Dil, Saddam has held Billions of $ from his people (thus proper medical care) why do you chose not to see that.

When a parent commits a crime and is punished, the sad fact is that his children may suffer too. There was no difference in the intention here. Once it became clear that the punishment was ineffective against the criminal, the punishment should have been revised. Although probably later than it should have happenned, this is what is going on as we speak. Instead of jail time, Saddam is now facing the death penalty. Once he's gone, the people of Iraq will be free from the sanctions.

CH, the PRIMARY sponsor for those draconian sanctions has always been the US, even though members of the UN security Council has requested their removal, the Bush Administration has continued to support their implementation.

I am sorry..in one instance you want UN approval, and when UN sanctions are mentioned then you decry it;s validity. Wah! Great logic pal!

Nor does anyone want to mention that while all these Iraqi children were dying, Saddam built his 12th palace!!! Did anyone see the video of the Palace that the UN inspectors visited lastweek. Darn, it was bigger than the whole darn campus of U. Columbia. It even had a poem praising Saddam in stone-inlay artwork on the marbel entrance foyer!!! But that is not the propoganda that Dil wants to talk about.

Utd, Why dont you ask the International Aid organisations who have seen for themselves the conditions of the hospitals, the sanitation, the broken sewage system, the lack of clean drinkable water, the lack of electricity... all of these are effecting the children of Iraq and are directly attributable to the draconian sanctions imposed.

Dil, I know the conditions and to be honest I don't approve of how the sanctions are setup. But to blame the U.S. rather than Saddam is quite unfair, he has billions to fix Iraq and help Iraqi citizens yet uses them as pawns instead in order to trick the world that sanctions are to blame for Iraq’s condition rather than his government.

Just what starving children in Iraq need, three gigantic Mosques, built by one of the most unholy men on the face of the earth and dedicated in his name. I wonder how many children could have been fed by not building these monuments to this monster?

"As of late 2002, three mosques were being built by Saddam in Baghdad. The first one, the Umm al-Ma’arik mosque – translated as the Mother of All Battles mosque – was comleted in April 2001 in time for Saddam Hussein’s birthday. The blue and white Umm al-Ma’arik mosque’s four minarets are each 43 meters tall and meant to represent the 43 days of conflict with US that occured during Desert Storm. Each reportedly eerily looks similar to a Scud missile in shape. Another minaret at the site is also reported to be 37 meters tall to symbolize the 1937 or Saddam’s birth-year. The Umm al-Ma’arik mosque also comes comlete with a Arab world-shaped pool ladden with a a 24 feet-wide mosaic of Saddam’s thumbprint and a glass display of 605 pages of Koran written in a mixture of Saddam’s blood, ink and preservatives.

The other mosques under construction in Baghdad are the Arahman and Saddam mosques. The Arahman mosque is due to be finished in two years and the Saddam mosque in 2015. The al-Rahman mosque is being buit in the horse-race area of the al-Mansour district in Baghdad.

The skeleton of the Saddam mosque is already up. When completed, the structure will be a replica of the Umm al-Ma’arik mosque, but five times larger and will thus be the third biggest in the world after those of Mecca and Medina. The Saddam mosque is being built on the land previously occupied by the old airport of Baghdad. Construction on that site reportedly began in 1998."

I don;t know why we go through this exercise every two weeks. It has been firmly established that the blame for the deaths of children is purely Saddam’s fault and these guys still want to keep him in power and continue to display the blame.

Good article on the palaces, OG :k:

CH.. Russia, China, France, Germany, most EU nations and almost all other member nations of the UN want the immediate end to the sanctions regime as they have seen the devastating effects they have had on the Iraqi people.

President Bush is not helping the Iraqi people by continuing his personal crusade against Sadam and by his continued sponsorship of the sanctions. He is not helping the Iraqi children by threatning another war.

OG, thats an old trick trying to place the blame for the suffering of the Iraqi children on Sadams mosques… :nook:

Ahhhh Dil,

Those were the Mosques, want to see the Palaces?

“Located 90 miles north of Baghdad and covering 4.0 square kilometers, this is the largest and most elaborate of the presidential sites. In addition to palaces and VIP residences pictured here, the site also includes farms and rural retreats for VIPs located farther to the west. Construction at the Tikrit Residential site has been ongoing since 1991.”

How much could EIGHT presidential palaces cost? How about two mosques that are 250meters across? What responsible government could build these things and then claim that the people were starving? It may be an old trick, but it’s a pretty valid question!

OG- Quit using facts, that's cheating.

:rolleyes: same trick I see… again this is a fallacy, it is nothing but sensationalised propoganda. The Iraqi children have been denied BILLIONS of dollars by the implementation of the sanctions regime which have prevented the purchase of essential medical equipment, funding for the maintenance and repair of State hospitals, funding for paying Doctors and nurses to work within the hospitals; many of the hospitals have been compared to an era more associated to Victorian England. Billions of dollars are denied to the Iraqi people as a result of the sanctions… compare that to a few million spent building mosques and palaces. Its pretty obvious even if the palaces were not built it would have very little effect elsewhere. To any observer its the Sanctions that are to blame.

how is this a trick?

Saddam has spent Billions not millions Dil.

Then you do accept that Saddam is at fault for the few million he spent on his palaces. How many children could he have saved with those millions?

Utd, Prove it !!!

And while your doing that, take a look in the Iraq folder.. you will learn a little more about WHY the sanctions alone are responsible for the deaths of 1.6 million children.