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Word from Baghdad;
A Campaign that is just Beginning
(April 9, 2003)
Friends-
Our team in Baghdad just called. It is difficult for us
to convey the
obvious
relief that we experienced upon hearing from them. The phone
disconnected three times giving us less than 10 minutes to communicate
with them. They told us U.S. soldiers and tanks are on streets
and
street
corners, they seem to be everywhere. Further, they expressed with
great
emphasis that an excessive amount of bombs have rained down on
Baghdad for the last week.
Today as we watch on television the countless hours of reporting
on the
tangible and symbolic destruction of a Saddam Hussein statue, the
number
of injured civilians, families losing loved ones, lootings, fires,
and
fighting
increases. Meanwhile our team in Amman attended a press briefing
where
they heard statements from United Nations humanitarian coordinators.
These statements have gone unmentioned
in the mainstream media. Carel de Rooy director of UNICEF in
Iraq stated, "Before this conflict
took
place UNICEF had networks and systems in Iraq that helped achieve
our
life-saving vaccination campaigns, nutrition campaigns, and work
in
education. What is horribly worrying about the looting, chaos,
and
break
down of order, is that those systems we counted on may completely
collapse," he added that at the beginning of this week, the UNICEF Iraq
appeal has received just 1/5th of its funding. "This is obviously
and simply
not enough. We have an emergency on our hands. Our actions in the
next
few weeks will determine the physical and mental well-being of
a
generation
of Iraqi children."
A representative from the World
Health Organization, speaking to the
increasing humanitarian crisis added, "Reports from Baghdad
tell of serious
civilian casualties and growing pressure on hospitals and health
workers.
Electricity supplies are erratic, the standby generators are being
overworked to the point of collapse; many hospitals are running
short
of
clean, safe water, staff are working extremely long hours in
unimaginable
circumstances and some vital surgical and medical supplies are
running
short...in a hospital with a basic infrastructure not functioning,
and
where
doctors and nurses have to perform difficult emergency surgical
operations
and provide intensive care without access to some of the most basic
services and supplies."
Months prior to the "shock and awe" onslaught,
UN officials, as well as
delegates with the Iraq Peace Team, had warned and protested against
the
use of such violence due to the realities Iraqis are faced with today,
the
realities as outlined in the statements above.
Adding greater concern
to an
already desperate situation, UNHCI commented on the inability for UN
agencies to enter Iraq at the current time, because of the lack of
safety on
the roads and access to warehouses and offices.
As our team in Baghdad continues to bear witness, we ask all of
you to continue to do the work that has just begun. The urgency
for water and
relief
that is felt by many civilians throughout Iraq is one that must be
heard and
echoed throughout the world until their needs are met.
In the most
recent
diary from our team in Iraq, Cynthia Banas wrote, "Death, destruction,
maiming, and lifetime trauma are the consequences of war. We have
witnessed children frightened beyond their years, and have seen their
mangled bodies in the hospital. War for them will never end."
Thank you for your work.
Thank you for caring.
Bitta Mostofi,
for Voices in the Wilderness
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