|
95181889 pages (since 02/10/2002)
|
|
with Bellaciao
|
|
|
To rebel is right, to disobey is a duty, to act is necessary ! |
Iraq’s rising numbers of orphaned children electronicIraq.net Iraq’s rising numbers of orphaned children Report, IRIN 18 April 2006 BAGHDAD - Orphans in Iraq, who often lack protection, food supplies and medical assistance, require urgent assistance, according to officials at the Orphans Houses Department at the Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs. "Orphaned children have become a very serious issue," said department director Abeer Mahdi al-Chalabi. "We have 23 orphanages with limited capacity, capable of housing only about 1,600 orphans." Although there are seven orphanages in the capital, Baghdad, and another 16 in other provinces, "they aren’t enough to provide assistance to all the orphans in the country", said al-Chalabi. She went on to point out that the increase in the number of orphans countrywide was an inevitable result of the bombings, assassinations and sectarian violence currently plaguing the country. According to a 2005 report issued by the US Agency for International Development (USAID), there were some 5,000 orphans in the capital alone, many of whom have been ostracised by society and have little hope of finding education or shelter. "My two brothers and I work with our uncle in the streets of Baghdad as peddlers," said Ahmed Chaloob, 10, whose parents were killed in a bomb attack two months ago. "I know nothing about orphanages, and I don’t think my uncle would let us go because he needs us to work," added Chaloob, who currently lives in a small room with eight other relatives. Orphans often live in the streets as beggars or drug addicts. Some are believed to have been used by terrorists to carry out attacks; others have reportedly been forced by criminal gangs to work as thieves, according to ministry officials. Given the prevailing atmosphere of violence and confusion, there are no reliable statistics for the number of orphans in the country. "We don’t have accurate numbers," said al-Chalabi. "Officially, there are 642 orphans registered in our orphanages," he added, estimating this number to represent a mere 10 percent of the total number nationwide. "I’ve been here since 1996 with my brother, and I have two sisters living in [another] orphanage," said Mustafa Hameed, a 15 year-old orphan at Baghdad’s al-Wazeriyah orphanage. "After our mother died in a car accident and our father remarried, we were taken here where we found care and love." The Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs provides some US $2,000 per month to each of the country’s orphanages, and ministry officials hope to eventually increase this amount to cover the requirements of additional orphans in the future. "Orphans are provided with food, social services, health care, psychological care, education and other activities, such as computer training and painting," said Abtesaam Rasheed, manager of the al-Wazeriyah orphanage. "But much more is required - we need support from the government and international NGOs to expand capacity and provide training for our social workers." This item comes to you via IRIN, a UN humanitarian news and information service, but may not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations or its agencies. All IRIN material may be reposted or reprinted free-of-charge; refer to the copyright page for conditions of use. IRIN is a project of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. © 2003-2005 Electronic Iraq/electronicIraq.net, a joint project from Voices in the Wilderness and The Electronic Intifada. Views expressed on this page may or may not be representative of Electronic Iraq or its founders. For website or publication reprint permission, please contact us. All other forms of mass reproduction for educational and activist use are encouraged. Page last updated: 18 April 2006, 12:10. By : Joëlle April Wednesday 19 2006
|
February Sunday 7 - 20:11 by : David R. Hoffman, Pravda.Ru Legal Editor 1 comment February Sunday 7 - 11:16 by : Algerian 1 comment February Sunday 7 - 06:29 by : Dr Gideon Polya February Saturday 6 - 09:03 by : Dr Gideon Polya February Wednesday 3 - 15:37 by : Charles Foerster February Wednesday 3 - 14:42 by : Dr Gideon Polya 5 comments February Wednesday 3 - 09:04 by : kakine February Monday 1 - 14:56 by : mm 1 comment February Monday 1 - 07:49 by : himalove January Sunday 31 - 18:38 by : William Hughes January Sunday 31 - 08:16 by : Clayton Hallmark January Friday 29 - 21:53 by : William Hughes January Friday 29 - 13:43 by : afrikakorps January Friday 29 - 11:35 by : Ivica 1 comment January Friday 29 - 02:27 by : William Hughes January Thursday 28 - 14:14 by : Mark Feeney and Bryan Marquard January Thursday 28 - 12:17 by : William John Cox January Thursday 28 - 11:10 by : Emmanuelle 5 comments January Thursday 28 - 03:55 by : Dr Gideon Polya January Wednesday 27 - 10:54 by : David R. Hoffman, Pravda.Ru Legal Editor 11 comments January Wednesday 27 - 01:50 by : William Hughes January Wednesday 27 - 00:12 by : William Hughes January Monday 25 - 22:30 by : Daveparts January Monday 25 - 12:49 by : Himalove January Sunday 24 - 08:11 by : himalove 1 comment January Sunday 24 - 01:49 by : Dr Gideon Polya 3 comments January Saturday 23 - 23:43 by : Dr Gideon Polya January Saturday 23 - 17:07 by : Michael David Morrissey January Saturday 23 - 11:24 by : King Johnny January Saturday 23 - 01:42 by : William Hughes January Friday 22 - 21:28 by : David R. Hoffman, Pravda.Ru Legal Editor 1 comment January Friday 22 - 17:39 by : Michael David Morrissey January Friday 22 - 15:45 by : Daniel Patrick Welch 4 comments January Friday 22 - 13:50 by : Dr Gideon Polya January Friday 22 - 07:36 by : himalove January Thursday 21 - 23:39 by : William Hughes January Thursday 21 - 21:24 by : JOHN CHUCKMAN January Thursday 21 - 16:41 by : Afrikakorps January Thursday 21 - 08:04 by : himalove January Thursday 21 - 04:43 by : William Hughes |

|