Saturday, April 21, 2007

BBC NEWS | Health | Millions in Iraq to get MMR jab

BBC NEWS | Health | Millions in Iraq to get MMR jab

Millions in Iraq to get MMR jab
A major immunisation campaign is to take place in Iraq in a bid to prevent an outbreak of measles.
The World Health Organization and Unicef are overseeing the work of 8,000 volunteers who aim to give up to 3.9 million children the MMR vaccine.

The children, aged one to five, have missed out on their routine jabs because of the instability in Iraq.

Health experts warn measles could kill up to 10% of infected children if an epidemic took hold.


This vaccine will certainly save many young lives
Roger Wright, Unicef

While measles in countries like the UK is often perceived as a relatively harmless childhood illness, it kills more worldwide each year than any other disease which can be prevented by vaccination.

Iraq's Ministry of Health is organising the two-week MMR (measles, mumps and rubella) immunisation campaign, which is also being funded by the European Commission.

'Window of opportunity'

Dr Naeema Al-Ghasser, the World Health Organization (WHO) representative for Iraq, said: "All children between 12-59 months everywhere in Iraq need to be immunised, even if they have had the vaccine before.

"The vaccine is safe and effective, and gives lifelong immunity against measles."

Roger Wright, Unicef special representative for Iraq added: "The timing of this MMR campaign is critical.

"This vaccine will certainly save many young lives and we are calling on everyone in Iraq to ensure vaccinators reach children safely over the next two weeks."

The campaign is part of Iraq's Measles Elimination Plan, which has so far reduced the incidence of measles cases nearly 20-fold - from 9,181 in 2004 to under 500 last year.

However, the country's growing humanitarian crisis has added to the challenges, increasing the risks for vaccinators and making it harder to calculate numbers of children to immunise.

There is particular concern about reaching children in the most violent parts of Baghdad, Diyala and Anbar.

Dr Al-Ghasser said: "We have a short window of opportunity to give children lifelong protection against a dangerous disease. This MMR campaign must proceed unhindered and unite everyone for children's sake."

Unicef recently called for increased funding for its work in Iraq. It says it urgently needs an initial $20m - of which only 11% has been received to date.

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/health/6573451.stm

Published: 2007/04/20 23:00:32 GMT

© BBC MMVII

BBC NEWS | Programmes | From Our Own Correspondent | Refugees create new 'Baghdad'

BBC NEWS | Programmes | From Our Own Correspondent | Refugees create new 'Baghdad'

Refugees create new 'Baghdad'
By Lyse Doucet
BBC News, Damascus


Millions of Iraqis have been forced to leave their homes because of the continuing violence in the country. Many of them have fled to Damascus where the Syrian government is asking why the Americans and the British are not doing more to ease the refugee problem.


WHERE IRAQIS HAVE FLED TO
Syria: 1,200,000
Jordan: 750,000
Gulf states: 200,000
Egypt: 100,000
Iran: 54,000
Lebanon: 40,000
Turkey: 10,000
Internally displaced: 1,900,000
Source: UNHCR



"This is Baghdad," asserts Hussain.

We are sitting on brightly coloured plastic chairs on the sidewalk of Sharea al Iraqi (Iraqi street) in the Syrian capital.

The street used to be called something else but no-one remembers that now.

And it does not look like that anymore.


The shop signs tell this story.

There is Baghdad bakery doing a brisk trade, Soulemaniyeh sweets, the Falluja restaurant.

Billboard after billboard announces transport to and from Iraqi cities.

The signs are all Iraqi, so are the accents, so is the way the women arrange their headscarves.


Western countries, including the US and Britain, have so far kept their doors shut for the vast majority of asylum seekers


I ask Hussain why he left the real Baghdad.

He raises one leg of his black and red tracksuit to reveal a round dark circle, a scar.

Then he pulls up one sleeve and shows me another - the marks of bullets meant to kill him when he was working at the Ministry of the Interior, a place reputed to be dominated by Shia hit squads.

He is Shia himself.

Here he sits with Basel, a Sunni Muslim.

So why did Basel leave?

Basel makes a slitting motion across his throat.

Sitting tight

I realise this line of men sipping glasses of hot sweet tea along the side of a shop is not just a grim sign of joblessness but a sad reminder of what has been lost.

"You're all sitting together here," I say, "Shia, Sunnis, Christians..."


Arab neighbours do not dare speak out publicly against a sacred notion of Arab unity but Jordan is quietly tightening its borders and sending some people back


It coaxes the faintest of smiles and then a grimace.

They shake their heads at the horrific sectarian violence threatening to tear Iraq apart.

"This is the new Iraq," declares Basel, with a kick in his voice meant to convince himself and everyone else.

He fled to Damascus last year but then went back to Baghdad a few months ago, hoping the new US-led security plan for his capital would work.

But now he is back in Syria and does not want to return again to what he calls "my death".

That seems to be the view, however reluctant, of many of the more than one million Iraqis now in Syria. And, there are some 750,000 more in neighbouring Jordan.

But where will they go?


Refugee crisis

Western countries, including the US and Britain, have so far kept their doors shut for the vast majority of asylum seekers.

Syria and Jordan euphemistically speak of "visitors" or "guests."

They do not want a new Iraq created on their land.

Sixty years ago, Palestinian refugees flooded across their borders in the 1948 Arab Israeli war and still have not left.

This movement of Iraqis is being called the biggest displacement of people since then, a massive exodus which will change the face of this region.


For now, there are no tented camps. Wealthy Iraqis are buying or renting their own homes - poorer ones slip into poorer neighbourhoods


Just how is still not clear but the scale of this human wave is staggering.

Iraqis now make up about 10-15% of Jordan's tiny population of less than six million.

Arab neighbours do not dare speak out publicly against a sacred notion of Arab unity but Jordan is quietly tightening its borders and sending some people back.

Jordanians and Syrians grumble discreetly about the rising price of everything from houses to tomatoes.

Many ask why should they shoulder a crisis they charge the US and Britain with starting by invading Iraq.

And the UN has been accusing everyone of "abject denial."

Little choice

After this week's conference in Geneva, there are more promises of aid.

But this tide shows no sign of stopping. Tens of thousands pour from Iraq every month.

For now, there are no tented camps. Wealthy Iraqis are buying or renting their own homes while poorer ones slip into poorer neighbourhoods.

But they are becoming increasingly destitute.

It is hard to find work. "I have two choices", says Iman who fled to Damascus with her teenage twins after her husband was assassinated.

She is Shia. Her husband was a Sunni.

"I can go back to Iraq but my brother-in-law will rip my children away from me. Or I can stay here and beg. But my children say it is better for all of us to die than for their mother to be a beggar."

I ask if she would like to go back to Iraq, if she could.

"Don't mention Iraq," she pleads, "it made me love my husband, my job, my life but now I despise it."

I ask her if she has a photograph of her children.

She draws a breath, and pulls a yellowed snapshot from her purse, its corners creased with time.

In the blurred image I see her, a younger woman laughing with ease, hair falling to her shoulders, her arms around her husband, their children in his arms, and a Christmas tree.

"You, a Muslim, celebrated Christmas?" I ask. She nods and looks away.

The past is another country. This was Baghdad of old, an ancient land of cherished traditions, the capital of capitals in the Middle East.

For now, that Baghdad is gone.


From Our Own Correspondent was broadcast on Saturday, 21 April, 2007 at 1130 GMT on BBC Radio 4. Please check the programme schedules for World Service transmission times.

Three Ways to Listen From Our Own Correspondent




Terms of use
Feedback
BBC Trial Information
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/programmes/from_our_own_correspondent/6575755.stm

Published: 2007/04/21 11:02:19 GMT

© BBC MMVII

BBC NEWS | Middle East | US marines 'devalued Iraqi lives'

BBC NEWS | Middle East | US marines 'devalued Iraqi lives'

US marines 'devalued Iraqi lives'
The US Marine Corps fostered a climate that devalued Iraqi lives, a US general investigating the 2005 killing of Iraqi civilians in Haditha has said.
The report, submitted in 2006 but now declassified, said the US military had ignored signs of "serious misconduct", according to the Washington Post.

A total of 24 men, women and children were killed at Haditha by marines who said they were attacked by insurgents.

A criminal investigation into the incident is continuing.

The Haditha inquiry is just one of a number the US military has been conducting into incidents of alleged unlawful killings by US forces in Iraq.

Video footage

Maj Gen Eldon Bargewell's report is an indictment of actions throughout the whole chain of command, from the general in charge to the men who carried out the killings on 19 November, 2005.

"All levels of command tended to view civilian casualties, even in significant numbers, as routine and as the natural and intended result of insurgent tactics," the US newspaper quotes him as saying.

Gen Bargewell said statements taken from those involved suggested the marines thought "Iraqi civilian lives are not as important as US lives, their deaths are just the cost of doing business, and that the marines need to get 'the job done' no matter what it takes".





The US military's initial statement on Haditha said that a marine and 15 civilians had been killed in a roadside bomb. A subsequent firefight had left eight insurgents dead, it said.

However, a local journalist took video footage showing men, women and children shot in their homes. Locals said the marines had gone on a rampage.

The US military instigated investigations and confirmed that 24 Iraqi civilians had died, none of them killed by a roadside bomb.

Three marines have since been charged with unpremeditated murder and four with attempting to cover up the incident.

Gen Bargewell is quoted as saying officers had tried to protect themselves and their troops by wilfully ignoring reports of civilian deaths.

There was no interest in investigating reports of a massacre, although there was also no specific cover-up, he is reported to have said.

The general's report, filed in June last year, does not address the specifics of the killings, which are the subject of the criminal case, rather it tackles the command structure and investigation procedure.

Gen Bargewell found that the marines had not identified targets properly, the Washington Post says.

The report also says the marines' story was passed up the chain of command and at all levels signs that the incident was significant were ignored.

A military judge has yet to decide if there is enough evidence against the seven accused marines to convene a court martial.

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/middle_east/6579511.stm

Published: 2007/04/21 14:57:36 GMT

© BBC MMVII

BBC NEWS | South Asia | US concern over Iran Afghan role

BBC NEWS | South Asia | US concern over Iran Afghan role

US concern over Iran Afghan role
A senior official in the US State Department has expressed growing concern at Iran's role in Afghanistan.
Assistant Secretary of State Richard Boucher said Iran might be becoming involved in an "unhealthy" way.

The remarks follow reports from Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen Peter Pace that US troops had intercepted Iranian-made arms intended for use by the Taleban.

It was not clear if the Iranian government was directly to blame, Gen Pace said.

Iran has rejected the allegations, the Associated Press news agency said.

Washington has repeatedly accused Iran of arming and training militants in Iraq and of seeking to develop nuclear weapons, charges which it denies.

But Gen Pace's remarks are the first suggestion that Tehran could be helping Afghan insurgents.

Mortars and explosives

Mr Boucher said Iran had played a positive role in Afghanistan's reconstruction and fighting the drugs trade since the fall of the Taleban in 2001.

But in the past year reports had appeared of political and military involvement, he said.

"We have been seeing a series of indicators that Iran is maybe getting more involved in an unhealthy way in Afghanistan," he said.

On Tuesday Gen Pace said coalition forces had intercepted Iranian-made mortars and plastic explosives destined for the Taleban.

But he said that unlike in Iraq it was not clear which "entity" in Iran was responsible for sending the weapons.

Iran, a Shia Islamic state, supported the Northern Alliance against the Sunni Taleban in a decade of conflict which ended with the Taleban's overthrow in December 2001.

Tehran initially cooperated with US forces fighting insurgents in Afghanistan, and as late as February this year the US military said there was no evidence Iran had sent any weapons to the Taleban.

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/south_asia/6567477.stm

Published: 2007/04/18 12:47:09 GMT

BBC NEWS | Middle East | Sunni leader attacks Baghdad wall

BBC NEWS | Middle East | Sunni leader attacks Baghdad wall

Sunni leader attacks Baghdad wall
A senior Sunni politician has condemned a US military project to build a concrete wall around a Sunni enclave in the Iraqi capital, Baghdad.
US forces say the wall, which will separate Adhamiya from nearby Shia districts, aims to prevent sectarian violence between the two communities.

But Adnan al-Dulaimi, who heads the biggest Sunni bloc in parliament, says it will breed yet more strife.

Some Adhamiya residents have said the wall will make their district a prison.

Adhamiya lies on the mainly Shia Muslim east bank of the Tigris river and violence regularly flares between the enclave and nearby Shia areas.

Construction of the 5km (three-mile) concrete wall began on 10 April and the US military says it hopes to complete the project by the end of the month.


I resent the barrier. It will make Adhamiya a big prison
Mustafa
Adhamiya resident

Once the 3.6m (12 ft) wall is finished, people will enter and leave Adhamiya through a small number of checkpoints guarded by US and Iraqi forces.

The US military says the barrier is the centrepiece of its strategy to end sectarian violence in the area but insists there are no plans to divide up the whole city into gated communities.

Senior Sunni cleric Adnan al-Dulaimi, who leads the General Council for the People of Iraq which is part of the Iraqi Accord Front, said the wall was a disaster.

Speaking to an Iraqi news agency, he said it would separate Adhamiya from the rest of Baghdad and help breed further violence.

'Maze of walls'

Some Adhamiya residents said the wall would harden the capital's already bitter sectarian divide.


"Erecting concrete walls between neighbourhoods is not a solution to the collapse in security and the rampant violence," housewife Um Haider told the AFP news agency.

"If so, Baghdadis would find themselves in a maze of high walls overnight, " she said.

"I resent the barrier. It will make Adhamiya a big prison," another resident, Mustafa, said.

Other residents also expressed alarm and said they had not been consulted before construction began.

"This will make the whole district a prison. This is collective punishment on the residents of Adhamiya," Ahmed al-Dulaimi told the Associated Press news agency.

"We are in our fourth year of occupation and we are seeing the number of blast walls increasing day after day," he said.

US and Iraqi troops have long built cement barriers around key locations in Baghdad and other cities to prevent attacks, especially suicide car bombings.

But no-one claims that such barriers and walls are protection in themselves, correspondents say.

Iraq has been in the grip of raging sectarian violence since the bombing of an important Shia shrine in Samarra in February 2006.


Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/middle_east/6579335.stm

Published: 2007/04/21 13:45:22 GMT

© BBC MMVII

BBC NEWS | South Asia | Taleban uses boy to behead 'spy'

BBC NEWS | South Asia | Taleban uses boy to behead 'spy'


Taleban uses boy to behead 'spy'
The Taleban in Afghanistan have used a boy of around 12 to behead a man they accused of spying for the US.
Parts of a video of the beheading were broadcast on the Dubai-based al-Arabiya TV network.

The Taleban said the dead man, Ghulam Nabi, had given the US information which led to an air strike in which a senior Taleban commander died.

The video footage shows Mr Nabi being blindfolded with a chequered scarf and making what is said to be a confession.

The boy, wearing a camouflage jacket and wielding a large knife, denounces him as a spy and then cuts off his head.

The father of Mr Nabi, who lives in Pakistan and who confirmed that his son was the man killed in the video, said his son had been a loyal member of the Taleban.

Senior Taleban commander Akhtar Mohammad Osmani was killed during a December air strike on his car in southern Afghanistan.


Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/south_asia/6579487.stm

Published: 2007/04/21 14:13:15 GMT

Germany OKs unsealing Nazi archive - Europe - MSNBC.com

Germany OKs unsealing Nazi archive - Europe - MSNBC.com

Germany OKs unsealing Nazi archive
Agreement for unsealing Holocaust records must be ratified by 11 countries
The Associated Press
Updated: 9:26 p.m. ET April 19, 2007
THE HAGUE, Netherlands - An international agreement to unseal a long-closed archive of Nazi concentration camp documents for scholarship has won crucial endorsement from Germany, officials said Thursday, giving the accord a majority among the 11-nations overseeing the treasure of historical documents.

The German Embassy in Washington announced that President Horst Koehler signed the ratification papers April 13, adopting amendments to the 1955 treaties governing the archive.

The storehouse of 30 million to 50 million pages is administered by the International Tracing Service, an arm of the International Committee of the Red Cross.

The announcement came as the oversight committee prepared to meet next month in The Hague to finalize arrangements for the transfer of digital copies to other Holocaust research centers, where survivors will be able to see their own files and historical researchers will be allowed to cull them for new insights into the Nazi machinery of persecution.

Key endorsement
All 11 nations must ratify the amendments before they take effect. But Germany's endorsement was crucial because of its place in history as the successor to the Nazi regime and because the archives are on German soil, in the central town of Bad Arolsen, and subject to German law.

Germany is the sixth nation to ratify after the United States, Israel, Poland, the Netherlands and Britain.

The remaining countries are Belgium, France, Italy, Greece and Luxembourg. Most have said they intend to complete ratification before the end of the year.

The collection of captured Nazi documents — death books, transportation lists, camp registrations, forced labor registers — was handed to the Red Cross to help find missing persons and reunite families in the postwar chaos. It later was used to validate compensation claims by survivors or victims' relatives.

Access to files rarely granted
Since 1955, it has handled more than 11 million requests for information, but it rarely has allowed anyone but Red Cross staff to see the material.

The files contain references to 17.5 million names. Their historical importance became clearer in recent months after The Associated Press obtained extensive access to the material on condition that victims not be identified fully.

The amendments were adopted last May after Germany lifted long-held objections that victims' privacy would be violated.

But the ratification process, requiring parliamentary approval in most countries, proved more arduous than anticipated, disappointing aging survivors.

Last week, the U.S. Senate adopted a resolution urging the remaining countries to quickly complete the legal steps.

The measure, introduced by Sen. Joe Biden, D-Del., chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee, also urged the commission at its May meeting to approve the immediate distribution of copies that already have been digitized.

© 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/18220426/