Press
Centre
Press Release
Press Centre
EMBARGOED until FRIDAY, 2 MAY 2003 08,30
GMT
Press Release
War is over, but the battle to protect
Iraq’s children is far from won
UNICEF Says Making the Country Safe for Youngsters Must
Be ‘Job One’
BAGHDAD / GENEVA / NEW YORK, 2 May 2003 – Iraqi
children still face grave threats to their survival, health
and general well-being, despite the end of the war and
the rapid process of change underway in the country, UNICEF
warned today.
UNICEF said that unless immediate national priority is
put on protecting children from these threats, thousands
of Iraqi youngsters will die unnecessarily – and
hundreds of thousands more will be injured, fall prey
to disease, suffer from abuse and exploitation, or fall
behind in school.
“We’re calling on both Iraqis and the parties
shaping Iraqi society to make the protection of children
job number one,” said Carol Bellamy, Executive Director
of UNICEF. “Iraq’s future depends on the health
and well-being of its children. At the moment we are failing
them. They should be our first priority – not only
in words, but in action. And frankly I’m not seeing
nearly enough action for children.”
One day after UNICEF international staff returned to
work in Baghdad, UNICEF outlined a series of dangers that
are still stalking Iraqi children despite the end of the
war:
· Recurrent insecurity across the country, preventing
humanitarian aid from consistently reaching every community
where it is needed and which leads to looting that further
hurts relief and recovery efforts
· Significant degradation of the national water
system, resulting in ongoing and widespread health hazards
that hit children hardest. Outbreaks of diarrhoea, cholera,
and other killer diseases have been reported across the
country
· Unknown numbers of unexploded munitions lying
in and around Iraqi neighbourhoods, with daily reports
of injuries and deaths among children
· Enormous stress on health centres and hospitals,
including an insufficient flow of needed medical supplies
to many locations and inadequate care for the injured
and sick
· Insufficient emphasis on opening schools, leaving
children on the streets where they are exposed to hazards,
and leaving their parents overburdened and worried
· Ongoing malnutrition, with food supplies not
yet stabilized and more than a quarter of all children
under age five already malnourished
“The war may be over but the work is far from done,”
Bellamy said. “Children are still dying, and they’re
still at grave risk. Let’s make protecting children
as comprehensive and urgent an objective as ending the
war was.”
UNICEF said its own key priorities are supporting the
recovery of basic health and water services, and immediately
opening classrooms. It is also working to re-establish
care for severely malnourished children. UNICEF noted
that nearly half of Iraq’s population are children.
Children and Stability
Bellamy said that putting children first in national
recovery efforts rallies a population and leads to greater
stability and political consensus. She said experience
in Afghanistan, Angola and other countries in crisis makes
clear that focusing on children’s needs has a galvanizing
and inspirational effect on populations that are hurting
from years of struggle and conflict.
Bellamy added that when investment is made in children
quickly – and with visible results – the prospects
for post-conflict peace and stability improve significantly.
Classrooms Are Key
“Nothing will do more to immediately improve the
well-being and protection of Iraq’s children than
getting them back in the classroom,” Bellamy said.
She noted that grassroots efforts to open schools had
taken root in communities across the country, reflecting
an awareness by parents that their children are at risk
and need structure in their lives.
“Classrooms give children a positive focus, they
allow the sharing of vital information, they keep children
off the streets, they protect them from exploitation,
they relieve parents and help them focus on their own
recovery,” Bellamy said. “For UNICEF there
is no more obvious and urgent priority than getting learning
underway as widely and as quickly as possible.”
UNICEF has already delivered hundreds of pre-packed “School-In-A-Box”
kits into Iraq to help local communities organize education
efforts quickly. Thousands of additional kits are packed
and ready to transport. Each kit contains the basics needed
to organize a temporary classroom, including pencils and
paper for children, chalk boards, bags for children to
keep their work and materials in, and instructional aids
for teachers. Each kit supports 80 children.
Lost in the Shuffle
“Enormous changes have taken place in Iraq in just
six weeks, and enormous activity is underway to help the
country and its people recover,” Bellamy observed.
“But amidst all the activity, we are losing the
focus on children. Let’s change that now. I urge
everyone involved in the future of Iraq to put children
first – and to do so peacefully and inclusively
– in every decision, in every action, and in every
step toward progress. This must be our new measure of
success.”
Back in Baghdad
The arrival in Baghdad yesterday of UNICEF Iraq representative
Mr. Carel de Rooy marks the first return of international
UNICEF staff to the Iraqi capital since the final evacuation
on March 19 prior to the outbreak of fighting.
Mr de Rooy's first stop after his 14 hour journey was
to greet the 200-strong UNICEF national staff.
"These people worked throughout the conflict to
maintain water systems and deliver humanitarian supplies,"
he said. "They did this despite fears for their own
safety, and we at UNICEF applaud them for their courage
and dedication."
Background
UNICEF has supported Iraqi children since 1953, with
a permanent presence in the country since 1983. UNICEF
now has more than 200 national and international staff
at work throughout the country.
Since the end of the war, UNICEF has supplied medicine
and supplies for hundreds of thousands of people; delivered
water equipment and worked to repair vital water facilities;
tankered millions of litres of fresh water into the country;
supported the opening of classrooms with school-in-a-box
kits; and supplied high-protein biscuits and other life-saving
nutritional items to children most in need.
To fund its emergency relief efforts UNICEF has appealed
for $166 million. To date about one-third of these funds
have been raised. UNICEF is funded entirely by the voluntary
contributions of individuals, foundations, businesses
and governments.
* * *
New video b-roll available! To view clips or to order,
visit:
http://www.unicef.org/broadcast/brolls/
UNICEF is funded entirely by the voluntary contributions
of individuals, foundations, businesses, and governments.
Contributions to UNICEF's ongoing support for Iraq children
can be made at http://www.supportunicef.org/
For further information please contact us:.
Geoffrey Keele,
UNICEF Iraq (Kuwait): 962 79 692 6191
Damien Personnaz, UNICEF
Media, Geneva: (4122) 909-5517
Alfred Ironside,
UNICEF Media, New York: (212) 326-7261
Simon Ingram,
UNICEF Newsdesk, Amman 962 79 504 2058
For interviews in the region, write or
call directly to the UNICEF NewsDesk in mman:
(962-79) 50 422 058
iraqichild@unicef.org
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