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Briefing note

22 March 2003: What UNICEF said at the UN briefing

Statement made by Geoffrey Keele

AMMAN, 22 March 2003

Good afternoon.

copyright UNICEF/ 2003/
Baghdad, 22 March 2003 - The institution where these children live has just received an emergency supply of rice, flour, high protein biscuits and tinned meat. When staff asked the children if there was anything else they needed, they said they wanted the bombing to stop.

UNICEF is now involved in an operation to help safeguard the welfare of extremely vulnerable children in the Iraqi capital Baghdad.

Yesterday was the Eid Narus, a holiday which in Iraq is particularly associated with a celebration of children. UNICEF national staff in Baghdad managed to get supplies of rice, flour, high-protein biscuits and tinned meat to four institutions in central Baghdad. These institutions house up to 800 children. This was in answer to a plea for help from administrators. These institutions do not have their own resources and are totally depended on what food is given from the government ration.

Links

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• Access more information about the children of Iraq at UNICEF's online Iraq Press Room

• UNICEF's professional photos are available to qualified publications. Write photo@unicef.org

The UNICEF team loaded two trucks and managed to visit all the four homes. They report that the children were clean and well-kept, but very disturbed by what was happening. When staff asked the children what they wanted, it is not suprising that the children asked for the bombing to stop.

That was yesterday. Because of events overnight two UNICEF staff members are attempting to revisit the four institutions. There was no update from the field by the time of this briefing.

UNICEF in Baghdad also recieved urgent requests for assistance from two other similar institutions at Karbala, to the southwest of Baghdad. It has so far not be possible to reach there.

The overhauling of back-up generators for the Baghdad city water and sewage systems has been completed by contractors working under the UNICEF Water Programme. Oil for the generators has also been delivered. This is a significant development that is aimed at securing the health and welfare of children who can all too easily in these conditions succomb through diarhoea and other diseases caused by unsafe water. If electrical power is interrupted by the bombing, these generators will be crucial to protecting people’s health and children’s lives.

In the present circumstances UNICEF would repeat the following:

We know that in wartime children are the most vulnerable.

Close to one million Iraqi children suffer from chronic malnutrition.

The UNICEF Emergency Team dealing with Iraq have procured and positioned a total of $9 million in health, water, and nutrition supplies in Iran, Turkey, Kuwait and Jordan.

Two lorries containing essential medicines and water purification tablets have arrived in Baghdad from Jordan. Most of the medical supplies have been distributed by UNICEF to hospitals. The chlorine tablets will be distributed to health centres by the Ministry of Health for use in any possible cholera or typhoid outbreak.

These are just the first of UNICEF’s efforts. As this crisis continues to develop we are preparing to mount one of the largest humanitarian relief efforts in our history.

We hope it will prove not to be needed.

###

For further information please contact us:.

Geoffrey Keele, UNICEF Iraq: gkeele@unicef.org
(962-6) 551-5921 ext. 126
(cell +962-79)692-6191
Anis Salem, UNICEF Amman: asalem@unicef.org
(+962-6) 553-9977
Wivina Belmonte, UNICEF Geneva: wbelmonte@unicef.org,
(+41-79) 909-5509
Alfred Ironside, UNICEF New York, aironside@unicef.org
(+1-212) 326-7261

For interviews in the region, write or call directly to the UNICEF NewsDesk in Amman:

(962-79) 50422058
iraqichild@unicef.org

Broadcasters!
UNICEF has video footage from inside Iraq, topics include health, nutrition, education, and access to water and relief supplies being packed at UNICEF's global warehouse . For a Beta copy of the b-roll, along with shot descriptions.