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http://www.hinduonnet.com/thehindu/mag/stories/2002092200390300.htm



The Hindu
September 22, 2002

    
Drums of war  
KALPANA SHARMA 


Once again we hear the drums of war. Any normal person
would shudder at the thought of another round of
muscle flexing, of carpet bombing, of planned
assassinations, of the terror of war � all in the name
of "war against terror". But not those playing those
drums. 
The hundreds of questions being asked about the
justification for the U.S. build up to declare war
against Iraq are hardly being heard above the din from
the White House. President Bush thunders forth in the
United Nations � and the world listens. Condaleeza
Rice, his loyal assistant, handles tough questions
without emotion and with chilling precision as she
justifies the need for a "pre-emptive strike" on Iraq.

If you ask for proof that Iraq is going to attack
America, you are told that proof is not needed. If you
say that weapons inspectors have found no evidence
that the country has a nuclear arsenal, you are told
that they were fooled and that Iraq does have weapons
of mass destruction. If you say, so do many countries,
including India and Pakistan, you are told that they
are not germaine to the current threat that the U.S.
faces from Iraq, and only Iraq. And so the war drums
continue to beat � louder, ever louder. 
The pounding of the drums is also drowning out the
cries of thousands of Iraqi children, who continue to
die every single day with frightening regularity.
Thanks to the U.N. imposed sanctions since the Gulf
War, around 5,000 Iraqi children are dying every
month. Within 42 days that the U.S. dropped 80,000
tons of explosives on Iraq in 1991 � the equivalent of
seven Hiroshimas � it killed not just tens of
thousands of civilians, it also destroyed the water
supply in many parts of Iraq, the sewerage and power
generation. The bombing and the sanctions directly hit
transport, health care, agriculture and the
communication systems. Furthermore, the 300 tons of
depleted uranium, used in armour piercing ammunition,
have contributed to a five-fold increase in the
incidence of cancer since 1991. 
Before 1991, health care in Iraq reached 97 per cent
of the urban and 71 per cent of the rural population.
Today, there are few hospitals, a desperate shortage
of medical supplies, and a massive health crisis.
According to UNICEF, in the south and central regions
of Iraq, the number of underweight children under five
has doubled. The majority of pregnant women suffer
from anaemia. The children born to them are
underweight and will probably die before they reach
the age of five because of a lack of food, or a lack
of medicines, or both. 
And what about women? Iraqi women played an active
role in politics in the past. The General Federation
of Iraqi Women (GIFW), a wing of the ruling Ba'thist
party, was in the forefront of pushing ahead with
women's literacy and skill training programmes. In
1982, its membership was 2,00,000 with 18 national
branches. Under the Ba'thist Party, Iraq reformed its
laws so that sex discrimination in the workplace and
sexual harassment were prohibited. It had laws that
worked towards creating gender parity in voting,
divorce, taxes and land ownership. 
In the years since 1991, women's status has also
suffered a grievous fall. Although Iraqi women are
still the beneficiaries of these laws, their economic
conditions have forced many of them to abandon their
education and to take up whatever jobs are available
to feed their families. A recent article in the New
Statesman mentioned an Iraqi woman professor who
earned more begging on the streets of Baghdad than she
did in her job. The preoccupation of the majority of
women in the country is to find enough money to buy
food for their families. 
Unlike the conditions of women under the Taliban in
Afghanistan, Iraqi women are not whipped in public if
they don't cover their faces, their wrists and their
ankles. Although many voluntarily wear the chador,
nothing happens to those who do not. A viewer asked an
American television reporter, who has been reporting
from Iraq in the last few weeks, why she was not
covering her head while reporting from there. Ashleigh
Banfield of MSNBC said, "There is no rule for wearing
the hijab here. And we should also tell you that Iraq
is considered very advanced when it comes to women's
rights when compared to the other Arab countries.
Women can drive here. They can work in positions of
management. They are able to divorce. They're able to
inherit money. They can also serve in the military
here. In some cases, family or tradition comes into
play and sort of skews that all a little bit, but when
it comes to actual law, those are the laws." 
So there we have it, Mr. Bush and Ms Rice, please take
note. One of your own is saying this about women under
the dreadful dictator who you want to remove. But do
Bush and company really care about the status of women
in Iraq or the health and chances of survival of the
children of Iraq? It was convenient to talk of the
status of women in Afghanistan. 
It is not so convenient to do so in the case of Iraq.
So no one talks about the women. Instead, they
concentrate on Saddam Hussein, a man the U.S.
supported when he fought Iran (just as it supported
Osama bin Laden when he fought the Soviets), who,
according to them, is the new repository of all that
is evil in the world. 
So as Bush and company beat their war drums once
again, they refuse to acknowledge that war is about
people, about killing people. Bombs don't just make
craters, they kill people. Sanctions don't kill
dictators, they kill children. To quote an Iraqi
woman, "Missiles and bombs do not think, they hit and
explode � whether you are military or civilian, sick
or well, old or young, men or women, you die. Where do
you go to hide?"

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