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Writers Articles And Opinions |
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28 April 2010 By Stephen
Lendman
Seven years under occupation,
Iraqis still cope with what Refugees International
calls "a dire humanitarian crisis that sees huge
numbers of displaced (and other Iraqis) struggl(ing)
to survive," a situation "for which the US bears
special responsibility" but does nothing to correct.
Recent UNHCR figures estimate
around 4.5 million refugees, nearly 2.8 million
internal ones (IDPs), a third of these in squatter
slums in Baghdad, Diyala and Salah al-Din. Many fear
returning home. Most are impoverished. Settlements
lack basic services, including water, sanitation,
electricity, and health care. Education is difficult
where available.
Camps are built in precarious
places - under bridges, alongside railroad tracks, and
near garbage dumps. In 2009, they were ordered to
vacate. They remain. The directive was postponed, but
they fear eviction with nowhere else to go, and little
help for their needs and welfare.
Most get no government, US, UN or
NGO aid given security's top priority. "The zero-risk
mentality of the burgeoning security industry has
hijacked more rational and creative thinking" to
provide vitally needed humanitarian assistance.
As a result, the occupation
grinds on while conditions deteriorate, "3,000 new
individuals registering for refugee status each
month," adding to a growing crisis. They lack proper
shelter, food, health care and other essentials,
living day to day fearing greater misery, disease or
death.
In February 2010, the
International Rescue Commission (IRC) issued a report
titled, "A Tough Road Home" on uprooted Iraqis in
Jordan, Syria and Iraq, saying since last visiting the
region in February 2008:
"the needs of displaced Iraqis
have become more acute, while international concern
and assistance have diminished. In particular,
assistance from European countries has begun to fall
off," given concern for their own situation at home.
For their part, refugees and
IDP's fear returning, citing persistent violence,
insecurity, and little access to housing, other
services, and jobs as well as mistrusting the
Americans, puppet government, and fearing
persecution.
Conditions for IDPs are
precarious, international law guaranteeing no
protection, nor can they get economic aid or the right
to work where they live. They desperately want to go
home, rebuild their lives, but need safe and stable
conditions to do it as well as resolution of property
disputes to allow it.
External refugees also want to
return. Others fear persecution and won't, but
sustainable reintegration structures and basic
services don't exist, and no plans are in place to
institute them. As a result, millions of Iraqis remain
scattered internally, in neighboring Syria and Jordan,
and other countries, trapped in poverty, fear, and
uncertainty under worsening conditions.
Like IDPs, external refugees face
an ongoing struggle to survive without reliable
incomes or safety. Besides lost loved ones, property
and savings, they're traumatized, see no end to their
suffering, and feel hopeless, frustrated and
desperate.
In his March 15 article titled,
"The New 'Forgotten' War," Dahr Jamail noted
Afghanistan getting most attention while the "Iraq
occupation falls into media shadows," except briefly
after significant violent events killing dozens or a
prominent figure.
Yet hundreds die most months.
Millions have been killed, irrepararably harmed, and
displaced - victims of genocide.
Essential services are spotty or
nonexistent, and persistent depravation on October 11,
2009 got Iraqis in Baghdad streets to chant, "No
water, no electricity in the country of oil and the
two rivers," according to AP.
Exacerbating conditions,
including a four year long draught "plagues most of
Iraq. In the country's north," AP, on October 13,
2009, reported inadequate water "forced more than
100,000 people to abandon their homes since 2005, with
36,000 more on the verge of leaving."
Cancer is another issue, the
result of "more than 1,700 tons of depleted uranium"
used during the war and invasion besides more during
the Gulf War. "Literally every local person I've
spoken with....during my nine months (in the country)
knows someone who either suffers from or has died of
cancer."
It's a war/occupation-inflicted
plague that will claim many thousands more lives for
years to come, including children born with DU-caused
deformities, especially in heavily bombed areas.
After two decades of war,
sanctions, and occupation, Iraqis have suffered
horrifically from one of the greatest ever crimes of
war and against humanity - ongoing, destructive,
devastating, unreported, and unaccountable.
War Takes Its Toll on Both Sides
Consider an April 24 Army Times
report headlined, "18 veterans commit suicide each
day," saying:
"Troubling new data show there
are an average of 950 suicide attempts each month by
veterans who are receiving some type of treatment from
the Veterans Affairs Department (VA)."
About 7% succeed. Another 11% try
again within nine months. VA's hotline gets about
10,000 calls a month from current and veteran service
members - troubled, desperate for help they're not
getting, and in danger of taking their lives to
escape.
On April 24, New York Times
writers James Dao and Dan Frosch headlined, "In Army's
Trauma Care Units (WTUs), Feeling Warehoused,"
saying:
"For many soldiers, they have
become warehouses of despair, where damaged men and
women are kept out of sight, fed a diet of powerful
prescription pills and treated harshly by
noncommissioned (and commissioned) officers."
They suffer from wounds, loss of
limbs, depression, PTSD, and despair, yet their
treatment "has made their suffering worse." Since
2007, at least four WTU soldiers committed suicide.
Coverups try to hide them, and according to Lt. Col.
Andrew L Grantham, WTU commander, "These guys are
still soldiers, and we want to treat them like
soldiers." In other words, they're to blame, not the
army, Pentagon or White House.
Not for Iraq's toxic environment
either, affecting US forces like Iraqis, endangering
their health, welfare, and lives that for many will be
lost, with or without physical wounds.
Iraq A Toxic Wasteland
Twenty years of war, sanctions,
and occupation left vast parts of the country's land,
water and air contaminated by scores of pollutants,
including depleted uranium, chemicals, toxic metals,
oil, bacteria, and other poisons.
The Gulf War was an environmental
disaster. It destroyed power and chemical plants;
factories; dams; water purification facilities; sewage
treatment and disposal systems; oil wells, pipelines,
refineries, and storage tanks besides bringing the
entire country to its knees, the result of vast
gratuitous destruction. In 2003, it was repeated, a
"shock and awe" blitzkrieg intermittently continued.
Tigris and Euphrates river waters
are contaminated and unsafe. According to Dr. Ibrahim
Ali, a Baghdad laboratory owner, "It is definitely not
good for human consumption, and every time we analyze
it we find something new that might, in time, cause
death. Various kinds of bacterial pollution and germs
we are finding can be as dangerous as biological
weapons."
Imagine a cocktail of oil,
gasoline, heavy metals, depleted uranium, pesticides,
fertilizers, benzene, other chemicals, various other
pollutants, and the result is poisoned water and fish
producing an epidemic of typhoid, dysentery, cholera,
hepatitis, and diarrheal diseases if consumed, cancer
and other diseases later.
Four years of drought added other
woes, reducing food and feed grain crops by 40% or
more, threatening as well to turn fertile farmland
into a dustbowl. Lack of rain and dust storms dropped
Tirgis and Euphrates levels by half in some places,
creating "a real serious disaster," according to
agricultural experts.
The combination of war, pollution
and drought wrecked Iraq's ecosystem, drying up
fertile farmland and marshes, turning arable land into
desert, killing trees and plants, and making a Garden
of Eden a wasteland, much perhaps never to be
reclaimed.
Empowering bio-pirates,
agribusiness predators, is another crime, the result
of (Paul) Bremer's Order 81 (April 26, 2004) -
"Amendments to the Patents, Industrial, Undisclosed
Information, Integrated Circuits and Plant Variety
Law."
It crippled traditional farming
by protecting developer rights of new and improved
plant varieties (GMO seeds), forcing farmers to plant
them, prohibiting traditional seed saving, and
instituting Technology User Agreements, requiring
annual royalties to companies like Monsanto.
Bremer's 100 orders turned Iraq
into a giant free-market paradise, a hellish nightmare
for Iraqis. They colonized the country for capital -
pillage on the grandest scale, a cutthroat capitalist
laboratory, weapons of mass destruction.
Iraqis got no role in the
planning nor were given subcontracts to share the
benefits. New economic laws instituted low taxes, 100%
foreign investor ownership of Iraqi assets, the right
to expropriate all profits, unrestricted imports, and
long-term 30-40 year deals and leases, dispossessing
Iraqis of their own resources, so no future government
could change them.
One of them is oil, ahead of
passing the Iraq Hydrocarbon Law, what former Prime
Minister Iyad Allawi said he'll do quickly if his
coalition forms the new government as well as honor
all signed deals in place.
Its provisions include a radical
restructuring of Iraq's oil industry, shifting the
country's reserves from public to private hands with
locked in deals as long as 30 years. If enacted, it
will be theft on the grandest scale, legalized plunder
of most of the nation's oil and all yet to be
discovered. Big Oil will be free to expropriate all
profits with no obligation to invest anything in
Iraq's economy, nor partner with Iraqi companies, hire
local workers, respect union rights, or share new
technologies.
With or without it, foreign
investors are signing deals, ExxonMobil the first US
company in 35 years last November. Others are being
finalized and more will follow - on favorable terms
for the giants to the detriment of Iraqis. Based on
current negotiations, foreign companies will produce
most Iraqi oil, whether on grand or grandest theft
terms to be determined.
Under Bremer laws, free-market
pillage was sanctioned. Mass layoffs followed, social
services cut, and local infrastructure rebuilding
ignored. Corporate interests alone were addressed.
Iraq became a metaphor for everything wrong with
cutthroat capitalism, showing it to be predatory,
heartless and bankrupt.
Violence and Corruption Plague
Iraq
The 2007 launched Global Peace
Index (GPI) ranks countries annually according to
peacefulness, identifying key peace or violence
drivers. Of the 144 countries in its 2009 report, Iraq
ranked last, Afghanistan second last.
On a 1 - 5 scale, 1 the most
peaceful, Iraq scored 5 on:
-- number of deaths from
organized internal conflict;
-- level of organized internal
conflict;
-- perceptions of criminality in
society;
-- respect for human rights;
-- potential for terrorist acts;
-- number of homicides per
100,000 people;
-- level of violent crime;
-- ease of access to weapons of
minor destruction; as well as
-- low scores in numerous other
categories, showing the country to be violent and
dysfunctional, the result of war, occupation, and an
internal struggle to free Iraq to sovereign control.
Notably unmentioned is that Iraq,
the cradle of civilization, no longer exists -
destroyed, balkanized, and colonized for capital,
planned genocide murdering its people.
Annually, Transparency
International (TI) ranks 180 countries on their
perceived level of public sector corruption, claiming
a 90% confidence of accuracy. Its latest 2009 lowest
scores went to Somalia, Afghanistan, Myanmar, Sudan
and Iraq.
Not addressed were free and open
elections, impossible under occupation. Those held are
media hyped and manipulated for stability. A
democratic process is absent.
As a result, US choices govern,
puppet leaders, not democrats, and rampant corruption
follows, the kind New York Times writers Marc Santora
and Riyadh Mohammed highlighted in their October 28,
2009 article headlined, "Pervasive Corruption Rattles
Iraq's Fragile State," saying:
"Corruption is a phenomenon that
forms a real threat to the structure of the state,"
according to interior minister Jawad Bolani. His
report detailed corruption throughout his ministry
employing one in four public sector employees:
-- money skimmed from salaries;
-- contracts manipulated and
fudged for personal gain;
-- ghost police officers on
payrolls so commanders can take their pay, and other
officers fired to steal theirs;
-- criminals freed by well-placed
bribes, their records expunged for payment;
-- detainees abused by guards to
extort money from relatives; and
-- political corruption to secure
loyalty of large portions of the security apparatus.
Corruption runs from top
officials to street corner cops, according to
investigators without listing names.
But in early 2009, a fraud
scandal related to food distribution forced the trade
minister to resign, and the deputy transportation
minister was arrested after being caught trying to
bilk a security firm for more than $100,000 to get a
contract for Baghdad International Airport.
"Going after corruption (can
exact) a high cost," said The Times writers. One
official, "after issuing an audit report on the Iraqi
Supreme Criminal Court, which examines (Saddam
Hussein-era crimes), was informed - through the local
media, he said - that a judge on that court had issued
an arrest warrant for him." It first read for "the
extermination of the human race, (then) changed to an
accusation of fraud."
Human Rights Abuses in Iraq
In April 2010, Amnesty
International released a report titled, "Iraq: Human
Rights Briefing," covering major media suppressed
crimes, including:
-- thousands detained without
charge or trial, some for years in overcrowded
conditions, gravely affecting their health and safety;
-- torture, ill-treatment and
other abuses against men, women and children,
including beatings with cables and hosepipes,
prolonged suspension by their limbs, electric shocks
to sensitive parts of their bodies, breaking of limbs,
removal of toenails with pliers, and rapes, among
others;
-- unfair trials, with low
quality court appointed lawyers, using torture
extracted confessions to convict;
-- the death penalty,
increasingly imposed in the last five years;
currently, at least 1,100 detainees have been
sentenced to death; over 900, including 17 women, have
exhausted all means of appeal or clemency; government
supplied information on executions is suppressed, many
carried out secretly;
-- killings and other human
rights abuses by armed groups, including kidnappings,
torture, bombings, and other attacks;
-- impunity for prison guards, US
and Iraqi security forces, and security contractors
after whitewashed or no investigations of their
crimes;
-- violence against women
(domestically and on streets), given little or no
protection by authorities;
-- refugees and internally
displaced people enduring severe hardships as
explained above;
-- human rights abuses in
Kurdistan, including those explained above; and
-- future prospects.
AI's conclusion - "the human
rights situation in the country remains grave. All
parties to the continuing conflict have committed
gross abuses and the civilian population continues to
bear the brunt of the ongoing violence. The security
situation is still precarious despite some improvement
in 2009. Attacks on civilians, arrests, kidnapping,
armed clashes" happen daily.
AI covers vital issues without
explaining their cause:
-- an ongoing war and genocide;
-- Iraq illegally occupied;
-- a US approved puppet
government in place;
-- a proxy army doing America's
bidding;
-- no concern for vulnerable
civilians;
-- the absence of vital
infrastructure;
-- a longstanding humanitarian
crisis;
-- the inability of millions of
Iraqis to cope; and
-- a brutal colonizer addressing
none of the above issues or the right of Iraqis to
sovereign freedom, peace and security - only possible
free from occupation.
The BRussels Tribunal (BT)
In February 2010, BT published
Professor Souad Al-Azzawi's report titled, "Violations
of Iraqi Children('s) Rights Under the American
Occupation," saying:
"Numerous violations to Iraqi
children's rights have continuously and systematically
been committed under the Anglo-American occupation of
Iraq," including:
-- targeting them and other
civilians during the invasion;
-- American forces murdering
them, sometimes by massacres, during raids in Fallujah,
Haditha, Mahmodia, Telafer, Anbar, Mosul, and most
other Iraqi cities;
-- killing them by bombings and
other attacks;
-- detaining, torturing, and
raping them;
-- impoverishing them;
-- starving them, causing acute
malnutrition;
-- starving whole cities as
collective punishment;
-- killing one in eight children
(650,000) by microbial pollution, lack of sanitation,
and clean drinking water;
-- inflicting grave harm through
chemical and radioactive munitions;
-- a failed health care system by
design, including by "the international assassination
of medical doctors;"
-- a dysfunctional education
system, available only to 30% of Iraqi children;
-- a crippled economy, ongoing
violence and killings, American troop raids on
civilians, and horrific hardships gravely harming
Iraq's men, women, and children; and
-- a 4.5 million orphan
population, according to a Ministry of Labor estimate;
others say five million; 500,000 live on streets with
no institutional help; others are in US and Iraqi-run
prisons or internally or externally displaced.
Al-Azzawi concludes saying that
since 1991, US administrations committed "genocide
amongst the Iraqi population, including the children."
After Iraq's invasion of Kuwait and the Gulf War,
imposed genocide began with crippling sanctions, then
continued during war and occupation.
"The (ongoing) excessive and
unnecessary use of power against the civilian
population, and the intentional targeting of even
unborn children (through chemical, radiological and
other weapons as well as other means reveals) a
premeditated plan to depopulate Iraq."
As a result, children live in "an
environment of total chaos, violence and terror."
Genocide will only stop when US forces leave, but
their crimes will affect Iraqis for generations. The
historic record will last forever, including in the
collective public memory.
Stephen Lendman lives in
Chicago and can be reached at lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.
Also visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com and
listen to cutting-edge discussions with distinguished
guests on the Progressive Radio News Hour on the
Progressive Radio Network Thursdays at 10AM US Central
time and Saturdays and Sundays at noon. All programs
are archived for easy listening.
http://www.progressiveradionetwork.com/the-progressive-news-hour/.
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