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Analysis : Middle
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UN report: More than 34,000 Iraqi civilian deaths in 2006
By Kate Randall
18 January 2007
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The United Nations reported Tuesday that 34,452 Iraqi civilians
died in 2006 as a result of bombings, extra-judicial executions
and other forms of violence.
Iraqs population is 27 million. If violent deaths occurred
at the same rate in the US, with a population of 300 million,
the toll would surpass 370,000. This would be equivalent in terms
of numbers to the annihilation of an entire city the size of Cincinnati,
Ohio.
The UN report, which acknowledges that its tally underestimates
the actual number of Iraqis killed last year, paints a horrific
picture of a society wracked by military and sectarian violence
and a collapse in the basic conditions of life. It is a social
catastrophe with few parallels in modern history, and a direct
consequence of the US invasion and occupation of the country.
The UN Assistance Mission for Iraq compiled the study by hand-counting
individual deaths for the entire year, using reports from hospitals,
morgues and other municipal authorities across Iraq. The first
attempt at such a body count, the figure obtained was nearly three
times higher than an estimate for the year compiled by the Associated
Press from Iraqi ministry tallies. The AP figure was 12,347.
The US government refuses to release any figures on Iraqi civilian
casualties. This expression of indifference and contempt for Iraqi
life is mirrored by the attitude of the US-backed government in
Baghdad.
An Iraqi government spokesman described the UN count as exaggerated
and told the New York Times that the report had been compiled
from incorrect sources. The spokesman went on to say,
according to the Times, that the government did
not have a system in place for compiling a comprehensive
figure on the violent deaths of its own people.
The UNs 34,000-plus figure, while itself staggering,
is vastly lower than the results of a nationwide household survey
conducted in Iraq by the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public
Health. That study, released last October, estimated that more
than 650,000 Iraqis, or 7 percent of the prewar population, died
between the onset of the US invasion in March of 2003 and July
of 2006 as a result of the war and occupation. Based on that studys
estimates, 200,000 more Iraqis are dying each year than would
have died if the invasion had not taken place.
The day the UN issued its report was one of the deadliest in
two months, with another 142 Iraqis killed or found dead, the
result of bomb attacks on buses outside Al-Mustansiriya University
and other targeted killings.
The report came less than a week after George Bushs January
11 announcement of a major escalation of the war, involving the
dispatch of 21,500 additional American combat troops. Bush made
clear in his televised address that there would be even greater
bloodshed, affecting American troops as well as Iraqis, in the
weeks and months ahead.
This escalation of military violence is cynically portrayed
by the administration as well as the media as an effort to protect
the Iraqi people from the widening spiral of Sunni-Shiite sectarian
violence and ethnic cleansing. In fact, a large majority of Iraqis
killed and wounded since the invasion have died as a result of
US military attacks, and the eruption of sectarian violence is
itself a result of the US occupation, which deliberately inflamed
sectarian passions and installed a Shiite fundamentalist government
in line with the standard colonialist policy of divide and rule.
The new effort to secure the population of Iraq
marks an intensification of military violence and terror aimed
at drowning the Iraqi resistance to foreign occupation in blood.
For their part, Congressional Democrats have made clear that
they will not act to block Bushs surge plan
by cutting off funds for the escalation, let alone taking action
to end the war as a whole and withdraw American troops from the
country.
The United Nations report paints a chilling portrait of conditions
in the occupied country, where an average of 94 people were killed
or found dead every day in 2006.
About half the deaths occurred in the capital, the majority
having died from gunshot wounds in execution-style killings.
Among the findings of the UN report cited in the Times account
are the following:
* The number of deaths, at least at the Baghdad morgue,
is running at double their number in 2005.
* The violence has expanded to the point of leaving hospitals
and morgues overflowing with bodies. The report described the
discovery of several recent mass graves.
* The kidnappings have completely redrawn the composition
of neighborhoods. Sinek, a wholesale market in the heart of Baghdad,
once thoroughly mixed, is slowly emptying of Sunnis.
The result described by the report, the newspaper
concluded, is a society in collapse.
By the UN studys estimates, from January through December
of last year 34,452 civilians died violently and 36,685 were wounded.
The wounded included 2,222 women and 777 children.
Since February 2006, another 470,094 people have been internally
displacedbecoming refugees in their own county. The highest
number of displaced Iraqis was in Anbar province, where 10,105
families had fled.
Anbar, a largely Sunni region, is a center of resistance to
the US occupation. The massive displacement of civilians there
cannot be attributed to sectarian violence. It is the direct result
of American bombs, missiles and machines guns, US military attacks
on civilian populations and the wholesale arrest and torture of
alleged insurgents.
In Baghdad, unidentified bodies killed execution-style are
found daily in large numbers. Frightened relatives of the victims
are often reluctant to claim the bodies from the six Medico-Legal
Institutes around the country for fear of reprisals, many believing
that the presiding police officers could be responsible for the
killings.
The report describes a pervading atmosphere of terror throughout
the country: No religious and ethnic groups, including women
and children, have been spared from the widespread cycle of violence
which creates panic and disrupts the daily life of many Iraqi
families, prompting parents to stop sending their children to
school and severely limiting normal movement around the capital
and outside.
A particularly appalling aspect of life in Iraq as described
in the report is the condition of women, particularly in the northern
provinces, who are increasingly forced to conform to strict, arbitrarily
imposed moral codes of behavior rarely enforced before the US
invasion.
The UN report notes that 239 women had burned themselves in
the first eight months of 2006. Though most of these cases have
been investigated as accidents or attempted
suicides, the majority of them are most likely attempted
honor killings. The report states, Most victims
of suspected honor crimes suffer horrific injuries which are unlikely
to have been accidentally caused whilst cooking of refueling oil
heaters.
Widows of Iraqi violence struggle to provide for the families
under conditions where jobs are scarce and projects to provide
jobs for women were abandoned when international NGOs fled en
masse at the end of 2005 because of the sectarian violence.
Children are also increasingly vulnerable, with many having
lost multiple family members. Some desperate parents engage in
trafficking of their children outside Iraq to work as sex slaves
or child laborers, or offer them for unlawful adoption.
See Also:
Two more barbaric state executions in
Iraq
[17 January 2007]
Bush administration threatens Iraqi prime
minister as Baghdad bloodbath is prepared
[15 January 2007]
Saddam Hussein execution: A sectarian
lynching
[3 January 2007]
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