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Iraq humanitarian crisis { April 18 2003 }

Original Source Link: (May no longer be active)
   (202) 347-0020 * http://www.accuracy.org * ipa@accuracy.org

Subject: * Humanitarian Crisis * Lifting the Sanctions

Institute for Public Accuracy
915 National Press Building, Washington, D.C. 20045
(202) 347-0020 * http://www.accuracy.org * ipa@accuracy.org
___________________________________________________

Friday, April 18, 2003

* Humanitarian Crisis * Lifting the Sanctions

On Thursday, less than 24 hours after issuing a press release highlighting
the apparent failures of the U.S. military's humanitarian operations in
Iraq, the international group Voices in the Wilderness was banned from
meeting with the U.S. Civil Military Operations Center or with
international journalists at the Palestine Hotel in Baghdad. The group
asks: "If the freedom to critique U.S. policies in Iraq regarding
humanitarian issues is being curtailed already, then exactly what does this
mean for building 'democracy' there?" A photo of the military's listing of
which groups are allowed into the hotel (noting in capital letters that
Voices has been barred) is available at
.

Here are excerpts of the April 16 news release that Voices in the
Wilderness issued just prior to the U.S. military's action to restrict the
group:

"Voices in the Wilderness representatives met today with the U.S.
Military's Civil Military Operations Center in their headquarters at the
Palestine Hotel to discuss the emergency, humanitarian crisis facing
Baghdad. Trash removal has not occurred for a month. Electricity,
sanitation and communications were all seriously damaged during the U.S.
war, and have yet to be restored in Baghdad. Cholera outbreaks have been
reported in Basra, and rumored to have been found in the central Iraqi city
of Hilla. Some of the local clinics are up and running, but medications for
conditions such as hypertension and diabetes are no longer available.
Quality control equipment and systems are also unavailable, and the lack of
quality control could lead to serious problems in treatment, as well as
creating the potential for epidemics due to contaminated blood products.
The previous distribution system set up under the "Oil-for-Food" program is
in total collapse, and -- unless essential services are immediately
restored -- Iraq faces a humanitarian catastrophe...."

Contacts for Voices in the Wilderness in the United States: Bitta Mostofi,
Tom Walsh or Danny Muller at vitw@vitw.org

SAM HUSSEINI, sam@accuracy.org, http://www.accuracy.org/iraq
Communications director of the Institute for Public Accuracy, Husseini said
today: "Paul Wolfowitz yesterday called for the ending of the economic
sanctions, saying that the Iraqi people 'have suffered enough.' Now, this
is quite an admission. While some protested for years about the economic
sanctions because of the hundreds of thousands of Iraqi deaths they caused,
the U.S. government continuously responded that it was Saddam Hussein's
regime and not the sanctions that was to blame for the suffering of the
Iraqi people. Now that it's convenient for them, the Bush administration is
moving to lift the sanctions immediately. Given the belated admission by
the U.S. government of the effects of the sanctions, we must come to grips
with the realization that the U.S. government has conducted a nearly
13-year war of military and economic warfare against Iraq. This siege of a
civilian population, as a matter of U.S. policy, was maintained regardless
of the conduct of the Iraqi regime and so violated U.N. Security Council
resolution 687, which stipulated that the economic sanctions should be
lifted when Iraq was verified to be free of weapons of mass destruction, a
subject the Bush administration seems to have suddenly lost interest in."

For more information, contact at the Institute for Public Accuracy:
Sam Husseini, (202) 347-0020; or David Zupan, (541) 484-9167



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