Friday, February 29, 2008

No wars I wish....



These days I've kept busy taking part in different anti war organizations/meetings trying to help end/not start any sorts of wars anywhere. Sometimes the news I hear and read from the places involved in stupid nonsense wars is so heartbreaking that I just sit down & cry for all the injustice in the world. The war in Iraq I believe started with nonsense reasons too and is a mess right now &has left people living in fear, hunger and the place to be one of worst and most unsafe place to live in.

Here is a heartbreaking article I came across in my friend's blog & I like to share it with you; I honestly had a hard time reading the whole thing to the end, so be prepared:


"Abu Muhammad, a Baghdad resident, found it difficult to let go of his daughter's hand but he had already convinced himself that selling her to a family outside Iraq would provide her with a better future.

"The war disgraced my family. I lost relatives including my wife among thousands of victims of sectarian violence and was forced to sell my daughter to give my other children something to eat," he told Al Jazeera.

In 2006, Abu Muhammad and his family were forced to leave their home in Adhamiya, a district of Baghdad, after militia fighting claimed the streets in his once tranquil neighborhood.

They began living in a makeshift refugee camp on the outskirts of Baghdad, but he soon lost his job and the children, unable to make the daily trek, quit school.

"There wasn't enough money to spend on books, clothes and transport," he said. His daughter, Fatima, the youngest of four children, began to show signs of malnourishment and a local medic said she had become anemic.

Desperation

By mid-2007, conditions for his family had become desperate and his children, once healthy and bubbling with life, had become gaunt and lethargic.

It was then that a translator and a Swedish couple claiming to be part of an international NGO arrived in the makeshift refugee camp.

"They heard about my situation and the woman, who said she could not have babies, offered some money to give her my youngest daughter of two years old," he said.

"I refused in the beginning but the Iraqi translator was constantly coming at the camp and insisting with the same question. One day I found that my children would die without food and a clean environment and the next time he came to my tent, I told him that I agreed."

He gave the translator all personal documents and after a week the couple came with new documents for Abu Muhammad to sign, authorizing the adoption and to pick up his daughter.

Abu Muhammad, who received $10,000, believes he is now damned by God, but he says his inner turmoil is allayed somewhat by his belief that Fatima will have a better life than many in Iraq.

"I could see her love in the first time she looked at her," he said of the adoptive mother.

Alarming disappearances

Local officials and aid workers have expressed concern over the alarming rate at which children are disappearing countrywide in Iraq's current unstable environment.

Many Iraqi families have fled sectarian fighting
to live in makeshift camps [EPA]
Omar Khalif, vice-president of the Iraqi Families Association (IFA), an NGO established in 2004 to register cases of those missing and trafficked, said that at least two children are sold by their parents every week.

Another four are reported missing every week.

He said: "[The] numbers are alarming. There is an increase of 20 per cent in the reported cases of missing children compared to last year."

"In previous years, children were reported missing on their way home from schools or after playing with friends outside their homes. However, police investigations have revealed that many have been sold by their parents to foreign couples or specialised gangs."

According to police investigations and an independent IFA study, Iraqi children are being sold to families in many European countries - particularly the Netherlands and Sweden - Jordan, Lebanon and Syria.

"Taking advantage of the desperate situation of many families living under poverty conditions in Iraq, foreigners offer a good amount of money in exchange of children as young as one-month old and up to five years of age," Khalif said.

He said there are fears children are being trafficked for the sex trade and the organ transplant black market."

3 comments:

Mohsen said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Mohsen said...

That is really sad of course. Even though I truly wish no war like you, as I am growing up, I think we should take a more practical attituteds than wishing for a too-good-to-be-true situation to appear. Small-scale wars and battles against virusy groups seems inevitable at least in today's life on the earth. Better approach is to attempt to devise a "war engineering" program whose mission is to mitigate the side effects of such battles. I am pretty sure among those who plan a war like what I described above, there are some who are concerened with these side results, but I just think these efforts are not enough at the moment. More investigation and better planning should have been taken before the commence of Iraq war, it seems to me.

umm...or is it that I am a bit too unrealitic? What I just suggested is just a thought which I throw right after I read your blog.... Never deeply thought about that! heh

Mohsen said...

Tagh Tagh! Anyone is here?