Children
of Iraq too Young to Die
Moment after moment,
the slim thread between life and death loosens. Children
are dying slowly due to the unjust embargo imposed by
evil forces on Iraq. More than 567,000 children in Iraq
have died as a consequence of the decade-long embargo.
Iraqi children cannot
find adequate food, medicine and even the toys to play
with. The embargo has starved children to death and
deprived them of their simplest rights.
Almost one million
children in southern and central Iraq are chronically
malnourished, UNICEF reported. "What we are seeing
is a dramatic deterioration in the nutritional well-being
of Iraqi children since 1991," says Philippe
Heffinck, UNICEF Representative in Baghdad.
Nutritional status of
children in Iraq continues to deteriorate due to lack of
adequate food, medicine and even safe environment. Iraq’s
environment has been seriously affected by the 30-state U.S-led
aggression in 1991. Thousand of tons of laser-guided
bombs and uranium-tipped weapons with total explosive
power equal to seven Hiroshima nuclear blasts were used
against Iraq.
The use of
Depleted Uranium during aggression on Iraq has caused
outbreak of new diseases and increased the incidence of
leukemia, congenital deformities and hereditary diseases.
A UNICEF report to
evaluate its work in Iraq during the past ten years
affirmed that mortality rates among children under the
age of five was 32% in 1996, in comparison with 18.7% in
1991.
The report showed that
54% of children suffered from diarrhea and 43% infected
with respiratory diseases. The report mentioned that
children between the age of 6-11 had left schools to get
jobs to support their families financially. Statistics
showed that the rate of dropouts estimated at 22.6%
between 1990-1998 as compared to 7% during 1976-1993.
Children cry play and
suck their thumbs. Then, there comes a time when they
enter school, learn and fight to survive. Children want
to shape their cultures, they actively shape the world
around them and want to be accounted for. But the embargo
makes this case different with the children of Iraq.
Iraqi children die
before they could open their eyes to see what is going on
around them. Sanctions hurt newborns who have not even
reached the age that enable them to understand the
concept of death. 
The embargo has also
affected child-rearing and weakened the relationship
between parents and their children as parents are always
outside home in the place of work to earn money to
provide food and other living requirements. Parents
cannot sleep with their children and have no time to sit
with them and hear their problems or explain their
experiences to them.
The embargo has
deprived Iraqi children from the taste of childhood.
Children are bearing the burden of the current economic
hardship. Iraqi children are too young to die, they are
too young to suffer the consequences of sanctions and
aggression.
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