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http://news.ft.com/servlet/ContentServer?pagename=FT.com/StoryFT/FullStory&c=StoryFT&cid=1045511218407&p=1012571727172

Financial Times
February 28, 2003

Desperate Iraqis face mass starvation, warns UN 
By Nicolas Pelham in Baghdad 

-"If there is a conflict it will be the biggest
challenge the humanitarian community has been
confronted with. Bigger than the Horn of Africa, and
much bigger than Afghanistan."


A war in Iraq could spark a humanitarian crisis on a
scale far worse than the famine in the Horn of Africa
or the war in Afghanistan, Ramiro Lopes da Silva,
assistant UN secretary-general responsible for the
UN's Humanitarian Co-ordinator in Iraq (UNOHCI),
warned yesterday.

 
"If there is a conflict it will be the biggest
challenge the humanitarian community has been
confronted with," Mr da Silva said. "Bigger than the
Horn of Africa, and much bigger than Afghanistan."

Mr da Silva said a conflict would force the UN to halt
the oil-for-food programme, on which the UN estimates
60 per cent of Iraqis depend totally for sustenance.
He said 10m Iraqis would require food assistance
within six weeks of a conflict - or an even shorter
time in the event of a mass population movement. "The
six-week window [to mount a humanitarian response] can
be narrower if we have a forced displacement of the
population," he said.

Unlike Afghanistan, Iraqis were a "fragile, urbanised
population" who had grown "extremely dependent on a
[food distribution] service provided by the state".
Without the supply of rations, mass starvation could
follow.

The warnings come shortly after President Saddam
Hussein made his first direct appeal to his people to
prepare for war. He called on Iraqis to dig trenches
in their gardens, and instructed police to find some
safe havens for their families so their minds would
not be distracted by their families in the hour of
battle.

Two days after the speech, there was little sign of
trench-digging. But small generators and kerosene
lamps have been in demand, and neighbourhoods are
combining funds to raise �30 for a borehole, the
equivalent of a teacher's salary for six months.

Until now, Iraq has insisted that that it had
distributed food rations four months in advance. But
Mr da Silva said much had been bartered as Iraqis
sought to raise funds for small generators and a
reserve of fuel to run them.

Aid workers paint a similarly desperate picture,
saying sanctions have forced Iraqis to sell their
assets to an extent that they no longer have "coping
mechanisms". "There is total exposure," says Care's
Baghdad director, Margaret Hassan. "Your home is the
last thing you sell, and Iraqis are selling now."
 
 
 


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