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Iraq
UN warns of “very grave” problems in Iraq
2008-04-05
AMMAN - A top UN official warned on Friday of “very grave” humanitarian problems in Iraq, including a lack of food and the internal displacement of more than two million people. “There are very grave humanitarian problems, the most serious is the internal displacement of the Iraqis... this is a phenomenon which we believe has slowed down significantly in recent months,” UN Undersecretary General for Humanitarian Affairs John Holmes told a news conference in Amman.

The UN refugee agency said on Tuesday that the number of internally displaced Iraqis had risen to more than 2.77 million people by the end of March, five years after the US-led invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein. Two million Iraqis have also fled to neighbouring Jordan and Syria, where social and health services are struggling with the influx.

Holmes, who is in Jordan on his way to Iraq, said basic services in many areas in Iraq “are still deteriorating.” “For example there are four million people who do not have enough food, only 40 percent of the population have reliable access to safe drinking water and one third of people are cut off from essential health care, life saving medication and basic immunisation,” he said.

According to Holmes, between four and nine percent of children under five are suffering from acute malnutrition.

“The humanitarian needs have risen significantly... over the past two years... we are not encouraging people to return to Iraq at the moment,” he said.
He's not seeing the Iraq that Yon, Totten and others are seeing. You have to wonder if Holmes gets out into the countryside at all.
Posted by:Steve White

#10  Four percent acute malnutrition would be a very big deal - and seems most unlikely. Due to a combination of economic geography and family/community support, very few Iraqis are vulnerable for something like acute malnutrition (as opposed to under-nutrition or chronic malnutrition, esp. some micro-nutrient deficiency).

Besides, I'm not sure how he'd come up with such a figure. Getting such data in most situations is devilishly hard. Probably just a wild-a**ed-guess.

In any event, the best "solution" to any actual problems is to establish and maintain security. Iraq has plenty of economic potential, not to mention being an agricultural country, so that a reasonably secure environment would lead to economic self-sufficiency or better.
Posted by: Verlaine   2008-04-05 19:26  

#9  For future reference, the US military should make it a practice in future of having "Civilian Identification" units. The purpose of a CI unit will be to biometrically identify *everyone* the US meets, and issue them a picture ID card.

Importantly, all the *data* on the card will be in an encrypted format, so all that can be seen on the card is their photograph. This is so it cannot be used by the enemy.

The value of doing so is incredible. First of all, it is an automatic census. Second, a simple card reader can be issued to quickly verify ID and activity to a central US military database instantly.

Third, it makes most government services much easier to carry out, from voting, food rations, health care, identifying foreigners, refugees, criminals and enemy, etc., etc.

Since it is totally controlled by the US military, it is utterly honest.

Every time any group of civilians is encountered, they present their ID cards, or they are detained until their biometrics can be checked, and if they are not in the system they are entered into the system. If they are already in the system and they pretend not to have an ID, they are suspect.

Much of our administrative and military headaches in Iraq are because we didn't do this.

Importantly, we could even send a CI unit into adjacent countries to register refugees.
Posted by: Anonymoose   2008-04-05 12:25  

#8  Things must be getting better in Iraq if UN Care Bears are finally showing up...
Posted by: Pappy   2008-04-05 12:06  

#7  John Holmes
Posted by: bigjim-ky   2008-04-05 11:20  

#6  There is a very grave problem in Iraq for the UN.
They aren't there to try to seize power and fuck things up even more.
Posted by: DarthVader   2008-04-05 09:22  

#5  "UN warns of “very grave” problems in Iraq"

No shit.

Oh, wait - you mean he wasn't speaking of the multiple mass graves we keep finding, courtesy of Al-Q?
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut   2008-04-05 08:54  

#4  we are not encouraging people to return to Iraq at the moment

Somebody should get the word out to all the dumb Iraqis who are returning at the rate of 1,000 per day. They just don't understand what they're getting into. It's nowhere near as nice as when Saddam was running things. Ask the UN if you don't believe me.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble   2008-04-05 08:41  

#3  Seems to know a lot for someone who hasn't been there yet
Posted by: Oldcat   2008-04-05 07:40  

#2  Show me the pictures, Mr. Top UN Oaficial. Make sure to include locations so they can be verified.
Posted by: gorb   2008-04-05 03:03  

#1  Compare wid STARS-N-STRIPES/RENSE [paraph] > US JOINT CHIEF - NO MORE/NOT ENOUGH SOLDIERS TO FIGHT WAR IN AGHANISTAN.

HMMMMM, by the above methinks that leaves OSAMA + ZAWI + OMAR, etc. versus PUTIN-MEDVEDEV + RUSS ARMY???
Posted by: JosephMendiola   2008-04-05 01:06  

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