Thursday, March 4, 2010

Kidneys for sale at $500 each

Peter Kandela

Monday 26th July 1999


In Iraq, people walk barefoot, and doctors have lost interest in ethics.

Baghdad today is a very different place from the modern, affluent city I knew in the 1980s. After nine years of war and sanctions, everyone's daily life is dominated by the need to survive the shortages, the unfamiliar rigours of poverty, the collapse of services. Cracks are appearing in the social fabric that may, in the long term, prove more difficult to repair than bombed power stations and cracked sewers.

Walking down the street, one sees the evidence of poverty everywhere. Once- fashionable clothes are now shabby and patched, and it is common to see people walking barefoot in the city centre. Old and noisy cars emit stinking exhaust, and their rusty holes are covered with an ingenious patchwork of materials.

Anything is available on the black market - but at a price. A junior hospital doctor is paid about 3,500 Iraqi dinars (ID) a month (£1 = ID3000), and an experienced teacher earns a maximum of ID7,000, but a kilo of meat costs ID2,400, and a 450g tin of milk is ID1,500.

Under these circumstances, most ordinary people have to sell possessions regularly in order to eat. Houses are becoming bare. Ornaments went, then rugs, cushions, utensils and now furniture. In some school playgrounds, teachers have set up stalls to sell their surplus household items. Parents feel a pressure to buy and they claim there is a connection between their spending and the examination marks that their children can expect to achieve.

The whole education system is in decline. Materials and equipment are not replaced, buildings are decaying and students are leaving school early and not going on to higher education, because they need to work if they are to eat. All this in a country that once had one of the highest percentages of graduates in the Arab world.

Anyone who can supplement their income with a second job will do so. A university engineering lecturer will come home as soon as he can to mend other people's radios. The city's main teaching hospital has a short operating list - because surgeons leave at lunchtime to drive taxis or cut hair.

The electricity supply to every household is now cut for 12 hours every day. The old houses of Baghdad were built to withstand the summer heat and keep food cold, but perishable food is often seen on open lorries in the searing heat, because there are no spare parts for refrigerated transport. The domestic water supply is often so brown that it stains the clothes washed in it, nobody collects the rubbish and burst pipes in the street are as likely to discharge sewage as water.

With all of this, the incidence of infection and food poisoning is high and increasing, but the shortage of drugs remains a critical problem, except on the black market.

The government has recently issued health ration books, which entitle everyone to six free visits to a doctor each year, during which drugs may be dispensed at nominal prices.

But people complain that, because of the shortages, they rarely get their full complement of drugs. Similarly in hospitals the lack of medicine and equipment means that there is a grave deterioration in healthcare and that malnutrition and infection are endemic. Resources are now so depleted that patients' notes are written on the back of torn-up packaging.

Perversely the private health sector is still flourishing, but it provides mainly cut-price services for patients from neighbouring countries. A kidney transplant package will cost about $4,000, with patients required to bring all the necessary medicine, including anaesthetic, with them. The organs are supplied locally, because people are only too willing to sell their kidneys for ID1 million (about £320).

At least ten such transplants take place every week in Baghdad alone, and doctors say that they are no longer interested in the ethical aspects of their behaviour in a world that has abandoned them.

In this desperate struggle for survival, moral issues are dismissed as luxuries, and crime and corruption are increasing exponentially. Homes are robbed so routinely that few people will ever leave a house unoccupied even for a short time. Many adults carry guns, and almost every family has a story of an accidental shooting, often involving children. After a funeral, where rites involve burial in a coffin, people have to guard graves for a few days or they will be dug up and the coffin removed for resale.

Iraq has never been free of corruption but it has now reached extraordinary levels, as officials invite bribes for almost any service in order to supplement their income. One Iraqi traveller reported recently that it cost him $40 to bribe his way back into the country. This amounts to ID80,000; the average monthly pay of border officials is around ID4,000.

Even without the cataclysms of wars and internecine strife, the people of Baghdad are becoming accustomed to levels of crime and corruption that were unimaginable just a few years ago.

The result is a climate of fear - and of mutual suspicion. Individuals fear for their lives, and minority groups are increasingly uneasy, because the scarcity of resources brings their very existence in the country into question. Baghdad is a city in rapid and dangerous decline, and action is urgently needed if we are not to see another humanitarian disaster.

The author is a medical practitioner and foreign correspondent for the "Lancet"




Excerpt from: The Secret Behind the Sanctions

How the U.S. Intentionally Destroyed Iraq's Water Supply

by Thomas J. Nagy

Over the last two years, I've discovered documents of the Defense Intelligence Agency proving beyond a doubt that, contrary to the Geneva Convention, the U.S. government intentionally used sanctions against Iraq to degrade the country's water supply after the Gulf War. The United States knew the cost that civilian Iraqis, mostly children, would pay, and it went ahead anyway.

The primary document, "Iraq Water Treatment Vulnerabilities" is dated January 22, 1991. It spells out how sanctions will prevent Iraq from supplying clean water to its citizens.

"Iraq depends on importing specialized equipment and some chemicals to purify its water supply, most of which is heavily mineralized and frequently brackish to saline," the document states.

"With no domestic sources of both water treatment replacement parts and some essential chemicals, Iraq will continue attempts to circumvent United Nations Sanctions to import these vital commodities. Failing to secure supplies will result in a shortage of pure drinking water for much of the population. This could lead to increased incidences, if not epidemics, of disease."

The document goes into great technical detail about the sources and quality of Iraq's water supply. The quality of untreated water "generally is poor," and drinking such water "could result in diarrhea," the document says.

It notes that Iraq's rivers "contain biological materials, pollutants, and are laden with bacteria. Unless the water is purified with chlorine, epidemics of such diseases as cholera, hepatitis, and typhoid could occur."

The document notes that the importation of chlorine "has been embargoed" by sanctions. "Recent reports indicate the chlorine supply is critically low."

Food and medicine will also be affected, the document states. "Food processing, electronic, and, particularly, pharmaceutical plants require extremely pure water that is free from biological contaminants," it says.

In cold language, the document spells out what is in store: "Iraq will suffer increasing shortages of purified water because of the lack of required chemicals and desalination membranes. Incidences of disease, including possible epidemics, will become probable unless the population were careful to boil water."

The document gives a timetable for the destruction of Iraq's water supplies. "Iraq's overall water treatment capability will suffer a slow decline, rather than a precipitous halt," it says.

"Although Iraq is already experiencing a loss of water treatment capability, it probably will take at least six months (to June 1991) before the system is fully degraded."

Other DIA documents confirm the Pentagon's monitoring of the degradation of Iraq's water supply:

As these documents illustrate, the United States knew sanctions had the capacity to devastate the water treatment system of Iraq. It knew what the consequences would be: increased outbreaks of disease and high rates of child mortality.

And it was more concerned about the public relations nightmare for Washington than the actual nightmare that the sanctions created for innocent Iraqis.

The Geneva Convention is absolutely clear. In a 1979 protocol relating to the "protection of victims of international armed conflicts," Article 54, it states:

"It is prohibited to attack, destroy, remove, or render useless objects indispensable to the survival of the civilian population, such as foodstuffs, crops, livestock, drinking water installations and supplies, and irrigation works, for the specific purpose of denying them for their sustenance value to the civilian population or to the adverse Party, whatever the motive, whether in order to starve out civilians, to cause them to move away, or for any other motive."

But that is precisely what the U.S. government did, with malice aforethought.

It "destroyed, removed, or rendered useless" Iraq's "drinking water installations and supplies." The sanctions, imposed for a decade largely at the insistence of the United States, constitute a violation of the Geneva Convention.

They amount to a systematic effort to, in the DIA's own words, "fully degrade" Iraq's water sources.

http://www.iraqwaterproject.org/docus/attack_water.htm

The Iraq Water Project

The Iraq Water Project (IWP) is a project of Veterans for Peace, Inc. (VFP), a national veterans Peace & Justice organization based in St. Louis, Missouri.

Our principal partner for IWP's major water facility reconstruction projects was Life for Relief & Development, a nonprofit organization headquartered in Southfield, Michigan, and dedicated to alleviating human suffering in Iraq and many other parts of the world.

Recently, we are working with Muslim Peacemaker Teams, Iraq, in providing water filtration units, helping supply clean water for schools, hospitals, and the Iraqi people.

Veterans For Peace Asks For Your Contribution to Continue our Clean Water Projects in Iraq!


Please help and give a tax deductible donation online

Or send a check made out to VFP-Iraq Water Project to:

Veterans for Peace
- Iraq Water Project -
216 South Meramec Ave.
St. Louis, MO 63105


_________


IWP Update - November 2009

New Links



I Remember Fallujah

Special Report by Yusha (formerly Tom) Sager

Memorial Day, May 30, 2005


_________


Thousands of families now have access to clean water

Prior to the March 2003 US invasion, the Iraq Water Project sent three teams of veterans to Iraq who paid their own expenses and worked alongside the Iraqi laborers repairing water treatment plants.

We were then proud to announce that thanks to the IWP six water treatment plants in different cities and provinces of Iraq were once again sending clean drinking water to more than 85.000 people. Read a post-invasion report by our IWP Project Coordinator sent from Iraq in August 2003.

Tribute to Edilith Eckhart, Co-Founder, Iraq Water Project

Project History

In 1999, responding to the continuing crisis in Iraq due to the first Gulf War and the devastating, comprehensive sanctions imposed by the United Nations, Veterans for Peace members in the United States created the Iraq Water Project.

Fredy Champagne and Edilith Eckart were the founders and first co-chairs of the project and members of the first team to travel to Iraq to begin the work of rebuilding water treatment plants in a country wrecked first by war and then by economic sanctions and continued bombing by the United States of America. Edilith later traveled independently to Basra to insure that the water was indeed safe to drink. Over several years, six water treatment plants were rebuilt in rural and municipal Iraq.

The primary goal of the Iraq Water Project has been to save lives

The second, but equally important goal of the original IWP was to educate the American people about the devastating effects a decade of sanctions had on the average citizens of Iraq and to force an end to these sanctions against Iraq.

The sanctions have been lifted, not as we hoped, through education and pressure on the US government, but as a byproduct of US President George W. Bush’s unprovoked attack on that nation.

The sanctions have been lifted because the War on Iraq completed the desolation of the infrastructure, a foreseeable consequence that was completely ignored in prewar planning. The US made sure the oil was flowing, but did nothing to prepare for the chaos that comes after the violent fall of a government.

Now it is not only the vast rural areas that are without safe drinking water, but the big cities as well. The US government and its Iraqi understudy have been unable to even get the lights reliably on, feed the hungry or provide basic health care.

Before this latest war, and in calamitous consequence of earlier US policy, Iraq was a social and environmental disaster in the making. Now it is a social and environmental disaster, assembled and delivered.

IWP Future

A major readjustment of the project’s approach was clearly necessitated by the advent of the United States invasion and occupation. The project goal of demonstrating to Americans the pernicious consequences of our government’s Iraq policy remains, however, as important as ever. But the unabating chaos that this war brought, and the vastly heightened danger to personnel engaged in reconstruction are obstacles not lightly dismissed.

In the fall of 2006 IWP decided to make a tactical change in our campaign to help Iraqis. In place of water plant rebuilds which benefit specific but limited urban and rural populations, we switched over to a more diffuse approach, whereby we send small and relatively inexpensive sterilizer units to public and private institutions all over Iraq.

This new direction offers the advantage of a wider exposure to Iraq's people while at the same time removing the pressure of funding deadline obligations. We send the units at the rate that donations and grants come in.

As well, IWP has entered an alliance with Michigan Peaceworks (Ann Arbor) and Muslin Peacemaker Teams in Iraq. We are each doing the same work and cooperation makes us all stronger. Photographs on this homepage show some of this effort. Click on the What's New section for further explanations.

Thank you for your interest in the Iraq Water Project.

http://www.iraqwaterproject.org/

Interfaith Network of Concern for the People of Iraq & Citizens Concerned for the People of Iraq


The mission of the Interfaith Network of Concern for the People of Iraq (INOC) is to join together and to act out of the teachings of our faith traditions to end the economic sanctions and war against the people of Iraq in a nonviolent manner.

Given the war in 2003, nothing has occurred which has lessened INOC's concerns for the 24 million people of Iraq. INOC will work towards:

a. Having humanitarian needs met, e.g. water, electricity, and food.
b. Establishment of a legitimate government respectful of human rights.
c. Education of Americans on the health effects of wars and the unacceptability of bombing civilian infrastructure and economic sanctions.
d. Role for U.N. including meeting humanitarian needs and formation of a government.

INOC was formed in February 1999 when former U.N. Assistant Secretary-General Denis Halliday and Middle East foreign affairs expert Phyllis Bennis gave presentations in Seattle to faith group leaders. In January 2000, INOC formally became a program unit of the Church Council of Greater Seattle.

While INOC is related to a Christian organization, it is interfaith in that participants are from the Jewish, Muslim, and Buddhist faiths, as well as Catholic and Protestant.

Non-religious participants are also welcome. INOC is a member of the Seattle International Human Rights Coalition and the National Network to End the War Against Iraq.


Some participants in INOC with invited speaker Hans von Sponeck (2001).

CCPI is a Seattle-based public awareness campaign and part of a nationwide and worldwide movement dedicated to ending the economic sanctions imposed on Iraq by members of the United Nations Security Council.

The sanctions were an embargo on all trade, except for humanitarian shipments specifically approved by the Security Council, and were initiated in 1990.

According to UNICEF, they have contributed to the deaths of half a million children under-five and continue to contribute to 'excess' deaths of over 5,000 children per month.

The sanctions have been widely condemned as a form of warfare, a 'weapon of mass destruction', directed against the civilian population.

After the U.S. invasion of Iraq, in May 2003, U.N. sanctions were lifted by the Security Council; but economic sanctions against Iraq remain in force under U.S. law. *


Updated on November 12, 2003.


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