CHILDREN INJURY

DEATH


The War Culture exists to feed itself, to engulf itself in resplendent affluence and material comfort.
Had Johan lived in a country that wasn't reeling from 13 years of economic sanctions, she might have survived childhood leukemia.
She is one of hundreds of thousands of children who died while economic sanctions and war shattered Iraq's health care delivery system.
http://www.counterpunch.org/ December 1, 2004 By Kathy Kelly
The Real Crimes of the UN in Iraq — Looking the Other Way
Shortly before sunrise, this morning, a small band of us gathered at a busy Chicago intersection and unfurled vinyl banners bearing enlarged pictures of Iraqi children.
One banner called for an end to US warfare in Iraq.
On my banner was Johan, smiling wanly, a 14 year old child who weighed 75 pounds shortly before she died of cancer in the oncology ward of a Baghdad hospital on September 21, 2003.
As our banners flapped in the wind, I tried to compose a letter in my head to her teenage brother, Laith, who recently wrote to tell me how much he misses her.
Had Johan lived in a country that wasn't reeling from 13 years of economic sanctions, she might have survived childhood leukemia.
She is one of hundreds of thousands of children who died while economic sanctions and war shattered Iraq's health care delivery system.
Writing my mental letter, I thought of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King's words of comfort to bereaved parents of four little girls who were murdered when the Birmingham Baptist church was bombed on September 18, 1963.
A former member of the Ku Klux Klan was convicted of the crime.
Addie, Carol, Cynthia and Carole had been praying inside the church.
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"These children-unoffending, innocent, and beautiful-were the victims of one of the most vicious and tragic crimes ever perpetrated against humanity." Dr. King said.
But he offered comfort.
"In a real sense," he continued, "they have something to say to each of us in their death. . .they did not die in vain. . .Indeed, this tragic event may cause the white South to come to terms with its conscience."
This morning, columnists in major US papers will continue alerting US people to possible wrongs, even crimes, committed by UN officials in the course of the "oil for food" program which coordinated and monitored sales of Iraqi oil, while economic sanctions ravaged Iraq.
These economic sanctions constituted the most comprehensive state of siege ever imposed in modern history.
It's not likely that Saddam Hussein ever missed a meal, but children, hundreds of thousands of children, suffered gruesomely.
Their suffering and death can be likened to child sacrifice, certainly the most egregious instance of child abuse in modern times.
They'd committed no crime, yet they were brutally — and lethally — punished for the government of the country into which they were haplessly born.
You aren't likely to find this story in the current exposés of UN wrongdoing.
In fact, many UN officials tried valiantly to put an end to the economic sanctions.
Hans von Sponeck and Denis Halliday resigned their posts and crisscrossed the globe educating people about the effects of the economic sanctions which Halliday termed "genocidal."
UNICEF's Executive Director, Carole Bellamy, held a 1999 press conference to announce the release of a "Situation Analysis of Women in Children in Iraq" which carefully explained that the economic sanctions contributed to the "excess deaths" of over 500,000 Iraqi children, under age five.
Not one US television network aired coverage of the press conference.
Only two of 50 leading US papers reported the actual shocking number of one half million "excess deaths" of children.
The Wall Street Journal asserted that it was all Saddam's fault.
The New York Times echoed this in an 800 word story quoting Jamie Rubin of the State Department questioning the study's methodology.
Young Iraqi refugees from Fallujah, receive their lunch donated by locals in Baghdad.

Some 10,000 US troops launched an assault on Fallujah, west of the capital, on November 8, decimating the city of more than 300,000 people, making it unlivable with no water or electricity.

Photo: AFP/Sabah Arar
Young Iraqi refugees from Fallujah, receive their lunch donated by locals in Baghdad.
Some 10,000 US troops launched an assault on Fallujah, west of the capital, on November 8, decimating the city of more than 300,000 people, making it unlivable with no water or electricity.
Fallujah child victim
Attack on Fallujah by US troops, April 2004
Seven months before the war crimes committed by US military high command in November 2004
www.counterpunch.org December 1, 2004 By Kathy Kelly
The Real Crimes of the UN in Iraq — Looking the Other Way
The sanctions punished children while Saddam's regime profited through smuggling: Many Westerners who traveled to Iraq tried to communicate this to people in their home locales.
The smuggling and the rake-offs were no secret, especially in the final years of the sanctions when there were many reports of lucrative kickbacks and inflated prices.
Many witnessed the sanctions actually strengthening Hussein's control, as the regime became the only source of food and stability for an increasingly desperate and disempowered population.
The children were punished.
When the pictures of those little ones, writhing in pain, wrinkled with wasting, desperate and bewildered
...held by equally despairing and tortured parents...
when those pictures were held up, sometimes as we fasted, sometimes while we were being led off in plastic handcuffs, sometimes at press conferences in front of the UN in Baghdad, sometimes in the middle of Basra cesspools and cemeteries
...when those pictures were held up, many people looked the other way.
US used the UN to wage economic warfare against children
When I try to understand why columnists in far away places wouldn't take on the story of these worthy victims, I try to remember that there are many worthy victims and one person can't undertake care and concern for every devastating, brutal injustice.
Pick your battles.
But I can't for the life of me understand how a steady stream of columns have appeared on op-ed pages, in the NYT and other papers, alerting us to possible crimes committed by UN officials in the course of the "oil for food" program while there has been no mention of the crime of child sacrifice in Iraq.
The concern generating reams of verbiage at this point is that UN officials may have looked the other way as Saddam Hussein and a number of collaborators pocketed rake-offs in underhanded dealings using profits from Iraqi oil sales.
I'm not equipped to comment on those charges.
But is there no columnist who will remind us that 500,000 children under age five died as the US used the UN to wage economic warfare against children?
www.counterpunch.org December 1, 2004 By Kathy Kelly
The Real Crimes of the UN in Iraq — Looking the Other Way
Let's consider the UN workers who stood a chance of getting food and medicine into Iraq — were they to look Iraqi families straight in the eyes and say, "sorry, we'll have to prevent these contracts from going through because you, in your pitiful weakness, can't prevent the dictator that rules you from getting rake-offs on the deal.
We can't compromise our principles...
They looked the other way.
I looked the other way myself.
We in our delegations looked the other way even as we knew that normally we'd be hopping mad and demonstrating in front of any government bastion that inflicted so much fear on its people...but that would have been the wrap-up for our entry into neighborhoods, families, hospitals, schools, ... it was a trade-off.
King said, "And so I stand here to say this afternoon to all assembled here that in spite of the darkness of this hour, we must not despair.
"We must not become bitter . . . Somehow we must believe that the most misguided among them can learn to respect the dignity and the worth of all human personality."
But this said, what words of comfort can I offer to Johan's brother Laith?
I can tell him where we stood this morning, and whose picture I held.
People looked.
Kathy Kelly is a co-coordinator of Voices in the Wilderness (www.vitw.org), a campaign to nonviolently resist U.S. militarism at home and abroad.
 
Bellaciao collective — Bella Ciao     November 24, 2004
The War Culture — By Manuel Valenzuela — ValenzuelasVeritas.blogspot.com
Fictional delusion
From sea to shining sea, superfluous undertaking through hereditary conditioning continues to mark an average citizen’s ascendancy into the American Dream.
The land of plenty has become the land of gluttony, suffocating the rest of the world in the unquenchable desire to attain a plethora of materialistic possessions that characterize the vulnerability of the human psyche.
As thirsty as a dehydrated tree, as voracious as a plague of locusts and as hungry as a starving pack of wolves, American society’s appetite for an ever-expanding array of products and goods at the expense of planet Earth and its inhabitants continues to unleash death, destruction and violence upon our teetering world.
It is our unattainable thirst for vast amounts of worldly possessions that has become the flammable liquid breathing life into the American war machine.
It is our lust for materialism and eager escape from unwanted realities that drive the engine of Empire, devastating so many millions and untold areas of land.
In our consumer driven economy it is the corporate Leviathan that hereditarily conditions us to pursue its products as it forces down our throats, almost from birth, the desire to pursue a fulfillment of the expectations it markets onto our society.
Whatever it desires to sell it strangulates us with, whatever trend it wants manifested it squirms into our lives.
What values it wants created and what goals it wants maximized it bombards society with using its vast collection of media and marketing tools it has in its possession.
We are the hand that feeds the Leviathan, mere energies in need of its products and services, mere pawns in its game of power and control.
It, in turn, has become the hand that rocks the cradle, allowing us to fall asleep and escape the pill-popping reality that has become our lives today that we desperately want to exorcise from within us.
Through the numerous products that flood our lives we can temporarily seek refuge from a reality that never seems to come close to the perfect fantasy we have been led to believe is attainable but that seems farther away each time we seek its fictional delusion.
 Will and machinations of madmen
Clandestine brainwashing of our minds obscured in innocent-looking images of happiness, perfection, fun.
A consumerist society that has spun out of control is implanted into our conscious from the early stages of our childhood development.
Through television we are conditioned to seek the great array of products the Leviathan provides us.
Our young developing brains, still too virgin to comprehend what we watch, are bombarded with advertisement after advertisement that begins infecting us with an excessiveness bug whose virus remains inside us for the rest of our lives, compelling us to waste away our blood, sweat and tears on those products we perceive will make our lives the equivalent of the fantasy we see unfold on our television monitors.
The Leviathan manipulates our brains and senses through the clandestine brainwashing of our minds obscured in innocent-looking images of happiness, perfection, fun, fantasy-laden advertisements, cartoons and movies.
Using our sponge-like developing mind, mass media transgressions and imagery capture and alter our ability to think as humans have for hundreds of thousands of years.
Our brains are being re-wired, no longer evolving through learning of culture, parenting and human behavior.
Instead, our primordial brains are subjected to intense imagery based on marketing and profit motive, designed to make consumer drones of us from our earliest days.
Bombarded with image after image of toy, food and fantasy, our child mind not close to perceiving the great manipulation taking place, we begin the process of becoming conditioned consumers expected to shop for an entire lifetime.
Photo: REUTERS/REUTERS TV
Iraqi Red Crescent find themselves blocked by the U.S. from providing humanitarian aid at Falluja Hospital, in this video frame grab from November 15, 2004.
Iraq's Red Crescent sent seven truckloads of food and medicine to the city, but U.S. forces blocked the aid convoy at Falluja's main hospital and said it could not enter.
The convoy turned back on Monday after three days of frustration.
Bellaciao collective — Bella Ciao     November 24, 2004
The War Culture — By Manuel Valenzuela — ValenzuelasVeritas.blogspot.com
From birth the Leviathan grips us with its sharp claws, reprogramming our minds to suit its sinister profit driven motives.
Even at our most innocent and pure we are left to deal with the most malevolent pack of wolves dressed in sheep skin that use our youth and brain underdevelopment to further their capitalistic drive for greed-filled nirvana.
We have been impregnated with a virus that makes of us consumer driven entities seeking refuge from the enslavement of our lives through the escape provided by the overabundance of goods and services we have from early childhood been trained to purchase.
When embedded into our mind from such an early period in our lives, this nefarious condition becomes second nature, almost instinctual, and begins to pass for human behavior necessary for survival.
It is all we have known, passed down from television, society and our own families who themselves have been made captives to the Leviathan’s incessant mind control mechanisms that over the course of a lifetime transforms individual thinking minds into a collection of two hundred million serfs dependent on the same products we produce.
Innocence lost and profit gained, the Leviathan, and the expert manipulators working to ruin childhoods, in essence transform society to suit their needs, using the great absorbing power of the young mind to create lifetime consumers that merrily join the fraternity of the War Culture.
The vicious circle begins with the cradle and ends with the grave, human procreation becoming the conveyor belt spitting out new foot soldiers that in time will themselves become part of Empire seeking and building.
Image: Jihad Awartani, Ad Dustour, 11/21/04
US embedded journalism in Iraq.
Conditioned for Blood
From birth we begin to breathe the smell of blood as a society addicted to violence manifests its craving through the many forms of media available to our children.
Cartoons seemingly engage our young minds with constant battles of good versus evil, black versus white, inculcating us to the violent means by which to achieve victory over forces at odds with those virtues espoused by the shows’ creators.
Cartoons are packed with violent undertones, filled with stories immersed with inner and outer battles that are only solved through violent means.
These shows begin manipulating our developing brains to accept violence into our lives, suggesting solutions to problems based on fighting, engagement and destruction.
The fantasy shown, whether in the form of human characters or animals, creatures or entities espousing man-like characteristics that solve their problems through incessant clashes is perceived by the fragile mind as a rational human response that makes violence an acceptable if not mainstream behavior capable of fixing what has been broken or solving that which remains a problem.
It is fantasy designed for the youngest that begins to make warriors of millions who have not had an opportunity to be exposed to human reality.
Violence is imputed onto the most innocent whose brains have yet to develop the capacity to understand the complexities of life or the behaviors of our circumstance.
Through the television, children morph from bright candles of innocence into explosive flames accepting violence, death and destruction as part of every day life.
Absorbing every image radiating out of the screen, seeing how fantasy solves its problems, learning behaviors from cartoon characters, the fragile human mind is programmed to accept conflict and conditioned to acquiesce to war.
Family members spend the Eid al-Fitr holiday with nine-year-old Sahar Mamod at Yarmook Hospital in Baghdad, Iraq, Sunday, Nov. 14, 2004.

She was injured by a gunshot shot wound when U.S. troops started shooting near her home in Baghdad four days earlier.

Photo: AP/Samir Mizban
Family members spend the Eid al-Fitr holiday with nine-year-old Sahar Mamod at Yarmook Hospital in Baghdad, Iraq, Sunday, Nov. 14, 2004.
She was injured by a gunshot shot wound when U.S. troops started shooting near her home in Baghdad four days earlier.
Why is every story and plot infused with battles only solved by violent clash?
Our minds, not yet having the capacity to understanding the complex human condition, are inundated with a barrage of behaviors that, though ingrained evils in our animalistic selves, should not yet be embraced at such young ages.
Yet somehow we are showering our youth with the tools of war, violence and conflict that they are embracing as realistic alternatives in human society.
It thus comes to pass that the War Culture fails to seek accountability to the numerous evils done in our name.
With television cartoons, videogames and films portraying endemic levels of violence, it is natural to accept that a society’s young will become immune and indifferent to the evils inherent in antagonistic conflict.
It is the barrage of cartoons and movies such as those marketed by Disney that are conditioning our society to accept violence, death, destruction and by consequence the wars draped in the American flag.
Why is it that every single Disney animated film must engage its characters in battle, war, conflict, death and violence?
Why is every story and plot infused with battles only solved by violent clash?
It is these forms of storylines that make it acceptable for our young to imitate and indeed believe that human society relies on Disney-like solutions to fantasy-filled problems.
Disney characters seemingly always wage violent conflict with each other, pitting good versus evil, with the desired outcome always assured as long as violence is the means by which it is achieved.
Why must violence be such an incessant ingredient to Disney’s success, to the great detriment of our children and society?
Is the War Culture so immersed and addicted to violence that even the perceived creators of goodness and happiness must flood the big screen with a violence that has been a part of the human condition since the beginning of time?
American society has in the last fifty years been transformed from bastion of innocent endeavors to citadel of violent and warmongering conditioning
It is the vast expanse of shows and movies that litter the airwaves, most infested with violence, death and destruction that are conditioning us to accept the violence and wars done in our name.
It seems the only solutions to the fantasy-ridden problems that comprise television and movies are through the undertaking of violence.
In fantasy-land it has become the means to an end; in America it has made our society immune to the dangers of violence, whitewashing its evils from our conscious, making its ramifications upon our lives nothing more than another manifestation of cartoon cleanliness where blood is nonexistent, suffering ignored, destruction unsoiled and death romanticized.
American society has in the last fifty years been transformed from bastion of innocent endeavors to citadel of violent and warmongering conditioning.
War, death and destruction have in our minds been made sanitized endeavors where pain, misery and murder are but mere hiccups that resemble the fantasy we have seen throughout our lives.
Violence is, therefore, accepted since it is not understood.
It is allowed since it is manipulated, becoming the fantasy it never is and the reality our conditioned minds make it out to be.
Photo: AFP/Digitalglobe/File
An overview of Fallujah provided by Digitalglobe
When we fail to understand reality it is transformed into the fiction we believe it to be
We have been trained well to accept the evils done in our name.
The videogames, movies and television shows that now flood our society glamorize violence, making it a fantasy that fails to awaken its deadly reality into our minds.
In today’s War Culture, fictional murderers, psychopaths and cold-blooded killers become heroes, even as they unleash hailstorms of bullets on the enemy and claim victory in the name of violence. Death and destruction has become comical, further degrading our ability to sympathize with those bulldozed by our mighty military.
The romantic notion of war, ingrained through our War Culture, makes robotic killers of young boys unleashing everything they have seen throughout their lives in the far away reaches of the world.
The symptoms of this disease can be seen in the criminal occupation of Iraq and treatment of Iraqis by American soldiers.
The War Culture represents a deviation from human evolution.
The reality of violence is never shown; the death, misery and emotions of war never explored.
Blood and gore are hidden from what they represent.
Screams and pain have become mere inconveniences.
Destruction of lives and property has been transformed into digital bytes ready to recycle themselves.
War is made an abstract mirage portrayed by film, television and video games, not the reality humans have for too long endured that made wiser men of us all.
Instead, we rely on fantasy to educate us to the horror and the perceived reality, thus making us willing subjects ignorant to the dangers human violence unearths.
When we fail to understand reality it is transformed into the fiction we believe it to be.
A video grab shows U.S. Marines inspecting a body inside a mosque after a battle with insurgents in Falluja, November 13, 2004.

A television pool report by U.S. network NBC said on Monday that a U.S. Marine had shot dead an unarmed and wounded Iraqi prisoner in the mosque.

The Iraqi was one of five wounded prisoners left in the mosque after Marines had fought their way in on Friday and Saturday.

Photo: Pool/Reuters
A video grab shows U.S. Marines inspecting a body inside a mosque after a battle with insurgents in Falluja, November 13, 2004.
A television pool report by U.S. network NBC said on Monday that a U.S. Marine had shot dead an unarmed and wounded Iraqi prisoner in the mosque.
The Iraqi was one of five wounded prisoners left in the mosque after Marines had fought their way in on Friday and Saturday.
The War Culture is us
By Manuel Valenzuela — ValenzuelasVeritas.blogspot.com
Fiction has triumphed over the reality of the human condition as the War Culture’s assembly line of seekers of violence continues to grow.
The master of conditioned violence, the Corporate Leviathan, extends its tentacles into every pair of eyes and every developing human brain, allowing the society it is designing to forever acquiesce to the violence, conquest, Empire and death it vehemently seeks to release upon the world.
From birth we are trained, never seeing the true horrors of war nor the energy released by the misery of violent conflict.
For untold millions who are on the receiving end of our failures, however, the violence is all too real, the death all too vivid and the destruction all too devastating.
For them, Hollywood and the fantasy on television are sick and cruel jokes that do not begin to describe the terror and suffering enveloping them.
In their eyes, the incessant violence of Hollywood has transmutated into the reality of their daily lives where blood is real, life is extinguished and hope destroyed.
This the War Culture fails to understand because the fantasy it sees and the reality it ignores clash like the violent cartoons conditioning legions of American children.
All the while, safe in our confined bubble that is America we live, growing ever accepting of our violent ways, unable to comprehend the reality of all we unleash and comfortably sitting on our couches watching airbrushed visions of war.
As we bask in the splendor of the luck-filled extravagance we live, shielded away from the war crimes being committed in Iraq under the red, white and blue and unaware of the damage done to untold millions throughout the world our lavish society continues to prosper, ignorant to the true consequences and devastating power of Apache helicopters, cluster bombs, guided missiles, Abrams tanks, fighter jets, mortars, artillery and bullets that our War Culture releases upon our fellow human beings.
It is this truth we fail to grasp, nowhere to be found in Disney films, Cartoon Network shows or Playstation video games.
The War Culture is us, and guilty as charged we all stand.
How can gifts that bring so much happiness have come from so much pain?
Valentine’s Day: Labor Conditions at US-Owned Plantations Show Hidden Realities of Flower Industry — Click Here
Nora Ferm of the International Labor Rights Fund talks about a new report on labor conditions at US-owned flower plantations in Colombia and Ecuador.
Beatriz Fuentes, President of the Sintrasplendor Union at Dole’s largest flower plantation in Colombia which has become the site of a growing worker’s struggle, joins us.
“Diamond Life”: Documentary Examines How Diamonds Funded the Civil War in Sierra Leone
— Click Here
We turn now to the issue of conflict diamonds—also known as blood diamonds.
The documentary “Diamond Life” looks at how diamonds funded the civil war in Sierra Leone.
Excerpt of “Diamond Life”, the documentary produced by Stephen Marshall and Josh Shore of the Guerrilla News Network.
Child Labor: The Hidden Ingredient to the Billion-Dollar Chocolate Industry?
— Click Here
On Valentine's Day, chocolate is the currency in which people are supposed to trade their love.
Little do they know that chocolate might have been made with slave labor. We speak with Brian Campbell, an attorney with the International Labor Rights Fund.
Global Witness Founder Charmian Gooch: “The Diamond Industry is Failing to Live Up to Its Promises” — Click Here
For more on the diamond industry, we’re joined by Global Witness founder and director Charmian Gooch.
Gooch says diamond companies have failed to deliver on promises to reduce the prevalence of blood diamonds.
Picture on right is of a child being followed by a vulture waiting for child's death due to starvation
Greg Palast on the Battle to End Vulture Funds
— Click Here
Greg Palast looks at the battle to end "vulture funds", where companies buy up debts of poor nations cheaply and then sue for the full amount.
Kewe comment:
There is no finer woman on the planet than Wangari Maathai
For more than thirty years she has struggled for her people in Kenya and for the world, to teach us the value of what we have had and what is now fast disappearing.
She has struggled, and best of all she has in most situations succeeded, not the least in the accomplishment of the seeing to the planting of 30 million trees.
She has been a constant advocate in stating that the environment and the health of woman children, and indeed men, cannot be separated.
Kenyan Nobel Peace Prize winner Wangari Maathai flashes a victory sign while appearing, with her children Peter Muta and Wanjira, on the balcony of their hotel, after the award ceremony in Oslo December 10, 2004.
Wangari Maathai is the first African woman to win the Nobel Peace Prize.
This is the first Nobel prize given to an environmentalist, honored for fighting poverty and by trying to save the continent's shrinking forests
                          To rebel is right, to disobey is a duty, to act is necessary !
Government deliberate choices that actually hurt childhood
Saturday 11th December 2004
One billion children in extreme poverty: a holocaust on a world-scale
by Maarten Vanheuverswyn

Children in extreme poverty

UNICEF has just released its annual report, which reveals most shocking figures.  Almost one billion children all over the world are denied at least one of seven commodities deemed essential:  shelter, water, sanitation, schooling, information, healthcare and food.  At least 640 million children lack adequate shelter, while 140 million have never been to school.  Safe water is something that 400 million children are denied while 500 million live without basic sanitation.  No less than 90 million starved.
As pointed out by UNICEF itself, these conditions in effect deny them a childhood.  More than one in six children are severely hungry.  One in seven has no access to healthcare at all.
“Too many governments are making informed, deliberate choices that actually hurt childhood,” said Carol Bellamy, UNICEF director at the report launch in London.  “When half the world’s children are growing up hungry and unhealthy, when schools have become targets and whole villages are being emptied by Aids, we’ve failed to deliver on the promise of childhood.”
War on the people
From the heart of Africa, where sectarian conflicts are raging through one nation after another, to Latin America, where hurricanes have ruined countless families, and Asia, where floods and landslides have swept whole towns away, it is clear that one group of people pays more than any other — the young and the weak.  Half a million children under 15 died of Aids last year and 2.1 million children across the world live with HIV. Fifteen million children have lost a parent to Aids — no less than 80 per cent of whom live in sub-Saharan Africa.
Perhaps the most shocking figure in the whole report is not on the terrible conditions half of the world’s children have to suffer.  It is the simple solution to this horror.  Goals set by the UN in 2000 to lift poverty across the globe could be achieved at a cost of just £52 billion.  That may seem a big amount of money but it could be raised in a matter of minutes.  Last year, globally £712 billion was spent on weapons. Precisely these guns, mortars, mines and shells are maintaining the present catastrophe, with dirty wars all over the globe.
Indeed, the major factor that keeps more than a billion children in a state of poverty is war.  And as usual in our “best of possible worlds”, these wars are fought over material interests, i.e. natural resources such as diamonds, oil and coltan.  Ever heard of coltan?  It is a mineral used in mobile phones, mined in Africa and exported to the West.  According to the UNICEF report, about half of the 3.6 million people killed in wars since 1990 were children.  Millions more have been displaced by wars and forced to become child soldiers.
Incidentally, today it was also reported that six years of conflict in the Congo have claimed 3.8 million lives — half of them children — with most victims killed by disease and famine.  More than 31,000 civilians die each month as a result of the conflict, the International Rescue Committee reported, citing mortality surveys prepared with the aid of on-site medical teams.
As Carol Bellamy from UNICEF pointed out, “Poverty doesn’t come from nowhere; war doesn’t emerge from nothing; Aids doesn’t spread by its own choice.  These are our choices... What we are saying in this report is that choices made by political leaders in many cases are very often negative when it comes to children.”
The report further stated that, “bridging the gap between the ‘ideal childhood’ and ‘reality’ experienced by half the world’s children is possible by adopting a human rights based-approach to social and economic development with special emphasis on reaching out to the most vulnerable.”  The questions remains, of course, what the vague “human rights based-approach” is supposed to mean.  What is certain is that it won’t be the approach of the Bushes and Blairs of this world.  They were caught in a scandal involving torture in Iraq and Guantanamo Bay.  They are the ones who hypocritically talk about combating Aids while squeezing the African continent and the Middle East with their divide and rule policies.  Darfur is only one of the latest examples of this game.
As a side note, “The State of the World’s Children 2005” also stated that even children in better off countries were victims of rising poverty rates.  In 11 of 15 industrialized nations, the proportion of children living in low-income households over the last decade has risen.  This list includes Austria, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands and Poland, where children living in poverty rose to 16.6 percent of all children in the late 1990s and early 2000s from the 14.0 percent it had been a decade earlier.  The crisis does not only affect the ex-colonial world — it is a global problem.
Charity or structural solutions?
Today’s Independent reports that 21,297 pounds were raised by its readers to help the sick and the poor in the Third World. Similar campaigns are being held all over the world, raising considerable amounts of money.  This shows that a great lot of people do care about the current state of affairs in the world.  It proves that all the talk about “inherently evil human beings” is nonsense.  Human beings don’t live in a vacuum but are social beings.  They are embedded in a social context and will act accordingly.  Workers may go on strike in solidarity with a sacked workmate; people appalled by the news they see on their TV screens every day may give something to a charity; and most of the people will simply try to survive and “get on with life” thinking it is not in their power to do anything.
On the other hand, terrible living conditions will create atrocious reactions.  That is why next to generous donations on the part of well-meaning people (apart from those like Bill Gates who give a tiny fraction of their wealth to brush up their image) and solidarity in general, we see the other side of the coin, i.e. that humans in certain conditions are indeed capable of committing horrible atrocities, not in the least in the proxy wars in the so-called Third World.  There we see the ugly face of barbarism that is threatening the whole of the planet.
In that sense, giving money to a particular cause should be seen as a will to change society.  Having said that, we must point out that while charity may temporarily alleviate some suffering, in reality this relief is nothing compared to the big needs of the sick and the poor on this planet.  It is not enough to do something “concretely here and now”.  For every child that is put into a charity programme, many others are dying at the same time from starvation.  The tasks are far bigger.  For example, can charity prevent the butchery in the Congo?  No, it cannot.  At most it can alleviate a small part of the mess that has been created after the damage has been done.  Rwanda, where a million people were killed in 1994, is a tragic case in point.
Capitalism is the name of the game
First of all we need to start from a clear analysis of the situation.  Why is it that 1.2 billion people are living on 1 dollar a day and 3 billion on 2 dollars a day?  (World Bank figures)  Utter reactionaries claim African people are inherently incapable of developing their countries.  This racist argument is just not serious.  Other people claim that the poor in the world should be patient and simply need to follow the example of the West.  In the West itself, the argument goes, it also took a hundred years to achieve reasonable wages, social security and the welfare state in general.
What they don’t explain is that in the last century for each of these achievements a bitter struggle had to be waged.  These reforms were achieved only through class struggle.  It was also achieved in a period of world economic boom.  The pressure of the revolutionary waves that followed the First and Second World War were decisive factors in this progress.  After the First World War there were revolutions in Russia, Germany and other countries, which terrified the capitalists.  They were afraid of a general revolt against their oppressive regimes, in which they risked losing everything.  With their backs against the wall, they were forced to give concessions to the working class in the industrialised countries.
However, that was not the end of the story.  As a compensation for these reforms, the exploitation of the colonies was intensified.  After the Second World War this trend was pushed through even more in order to avoid revolution in the West.  The capitalist system can only survive by maintaining exploitation, oppression and inequality in a great part of the world.  Within the so-called “free market” system Africa cannot reach the living standards of the West.  It is clear that the way forward is not the capitalist road.  We need to look further than the narrow perspective offered by most Third World organisations.
The tactics of most NGOs and charity organisations won’t ever solve the fundamental contradictions in society.  For example, while in Latin America one revolution after another sweeps the continent, most NGOs propose to create yet another small cooperative or install an extra well.  While the people try to overthrow the present regimes, they propose to set up Western style trade unions or to “democratise” their governments.
They forget that these governments only serve the rich and survive thanks to the big landowners and American imperialism in particular.  They forget that most Western trade unions have long abandoned the struggle for a better world and only adopt policies of softening serious conflicts with the bosses or government.  Thereby they neglect the fact that bourgeois democracies and the state are not neutral but are there to serve capital.
In Africa in particular, the comprador bourgeoisie is openly collaborating with Western imperialism and is in effect a significant part of the problem.  So it is not a matter of the “rich North” against the “poor South” but a matter of class against class.  In all ex-colonial countries a vicious clique is ruling over the people. Hence, the question should be posed in a political way, that is of overthrowing these regimes, organising the people and making them conscious of their own power instead of limiting oneself to doing symptomatic charity work.
The bleak picture in the whole ex-colonial world contrasts sharply with the promises on children’s rights about a healthy and protected life, as laid out in the 1989 UN Convention on the Rights of the Child.  This latest report on these terrible conditions is only one more condemnation of the present system.  It shows how futile the empty words of all bourgeois politicians are.  In spite of their hollow promises (Kyoto, Aids, world poverty), they are not interested in solving these burning questions.  Instead they continue their imperialist wars under the fig leaf of democracy and the “war on terror”.  But what about this war on the people?  In a world with an abundance of resources, tens of thousands of people are dying on a daily basis.  What else is this than a new, permanent holocaust?
It is important to understand that there is a method in the madness.  These kinds of problems won’t simply go away by adding another drop in the ocean.  Structural problems demand structural solutions.  They require a radical change in the present economic system.
We cannot solve these fundamental problems by adopting temporary, superficial remedies.  We can have a charitable approach, but then a new war breaks out.  More people are killed, more basic infrastructure is destroyed.  The work of a hundred charities can be undone by one small war.
Wars take place under capitalism because they are terribly profitable.  To put an end to this nightmare it is necessary to destroy the very system that causes the wars, the hunger, the poverty.  That system is called capitalism.  It must be overthrown.  That is what Marxists fight for systematically in every corner of the labour movement nationally and internationally.
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by : Maarten Vanheuverswyn
Saturday 11th December 2004
Unspeakable grief and horror
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                        ...and the circus of deception continues...
Most recent 'Circus'    click here
He says, "You are quite mad, Kewe"
And of course I am.
Why, I don't believe any of it — not the bloody body, not the bloody mind, not even the bloody Universe, or is it bloody multiverse.
"It's all illusion," I say.   "Don't you know, my lad, my lassie.   The game!   The game, me girl, me boy!   Takes on interest, don't you know.   T'is me sport, till doest find a better!"
Pssssst — but all this stuff is happening down here
Let's change it!
       Afghanistan — Western Terror States: Canada, US, UK, France, Germany, Italy       
       Photos of Afghanistan people being killed and injured by NATO     
U.S. Bombing of Fallujah
— the Third World War continued: Chechnya, North Ossetia, Ingushetia
More atrocities - Ahmed and Asma, story of two children dying
al-Sadr City
Iraq's real WMD crime - the effects of depleted uranium
World War Two soldiers did not kill Kill ratio Korea, Vietnam. Iraq.
Afghanistan - Terror?
Photos over past three months.
Aid agencies compromised by US actions
US soldiers committing suicide Afghanistan Iraq — Most Recent
Psychologist Pete Linnerooth was one of three who were part of a mental health crew in charge of the US 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 1st Infantry Division in the Baghdad area of Iraq.   Pete Linnerooth committed suicide by turning a gun upon himself in January of 2013
Veterans kill themselves at a rate of one every 80 minutes.   More than 6,500 veteran suicides are logged every year — more than the total number of soldiers killed in Afghanistan and Iraq combined since those wars began.
Mary Coghill Kirkland said she asked her son, 21-year-old Army Spc. Derrick Kirkland, what was wrong as soon as he came back from his first deployment to Iraq in 2008.   He had a ready answer: "Mom, I'm a murderer."
A military base on the brink
As police agents watched he shot himself in the head
Murders, fights, robberies, domestic violence, drunk driving, drug overdoses
US soldiers committing suicide Afghanistan Iraq II
U.S. Soldier Killed Herself After Objecting to Interrogation Techniques
Private Gary Boswell, 20, from Milford Haven, Pembrokeshire, was found hanging in a playground in July
She is Jeanne "Linda" Michel, a Navy medic.   She came home last month to her husband and three kids ages 11, 5, and 4, delighted to be back in her suburban home of Clifton Park in upstate New York.   Two weeks after she got home, she shot and killed herself.
Peterson refused to participate in the torture after only two nights working in the unit known as the cage
     United States Numb to Iraq Troop Deaths       
     All papers relating to the interrogations have been destroyed     
      We stripped them and were supposed to mock them and degrade their manhood     
US soldiers committing suicide Iraq Vietnam
The Iraq War - complete listing of articles, includes images
The House of Saud and Bush
       All with U.S. Money:       
       US and Israel War Crimes       
All with U.S. Money:
Israel agents stole identity of New Zealand cerebral palsy victim.
(IsraelNN.com July 15, 2004) The Foreign Ministry will take steps towards restoring relations with New Zealand. New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark today announced she was implementing diplomatic sanctions after two Israelis were sentenced on charges of attempting to obtain illegal passports. Despite Israeli refusal to respond to the accusations, the two are labeled in the New Zealand media as Mossad agents acting on behalf of the Israeli intelligence community.

Foreign Ministry officials stated they will do everything possible to renew diplomatic ties, expressing sorrow over the "unfortunate incident".
Projected mortality rate of Sudan refugee starvation deaths — Darfur pictures
Suicide now top killer of Israeli soldiers
Atrocities files - graphic images
'Suicide bombings,' the angel said, 'and beheadings.'
'And the others that have all the power - they fly missiles in the sky.
They don't even look at the people they kill.'
       The real Ronald Reagan       
       — Nicaragua, Guatemala, El Salvador, South Africa        
Follow the torture trail...
       Cowardly attacks by air killing men women and children in their homes, often never seeing those they kill as the drones or aircraft fly back to the cowardly bases       
       If they kill only the husband, see how they care for the family they have destroyed       
       Afghanistan — Western Terror States: Canada, US, UK, France, Germany, Italy       
       Photos of Afghanistan people being killed and injured by NATO     
        When you talk with God        
         were you also spending your time, money and energy, killing people?         
       Are they now alive or dead?       
Photos July 2004
US Debt
Photos June 2004
Lest we forget - Ahmed and Asma, story of two children dying
Photos May 2004
American military: Abu Gharib (Ghraib) prison photos, humiliation and torture
- London Daily Mirror article: non-sexually explicit pictures
Photos April 2004
The celebration of Jerusalem day, the US missiles that rained onto children in Gaza,
and, a gathering of top articles over the past nine months
Photos March 2004
The Iraq War - complete listing of articles, includes images
Photos February 2004
US missiles - US money - and Palestine
Photos January 2004
Ethnic cleansing in the Beduin desert
Photos December 2003
Shirin Ebadi Nobel Peace Prize winner 2003
Photos November 2003
Photos October 2003
Aljazeerah.info
Photos September 2003
Atrocities - graphic images...
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