14-12-1999 Report Iraq: 1989-1999, a decade of sanctions After two international wars (the Iran-Iraq war of 1980-88 and the Gulf war of 1991) and nine years of UN-imposed trade sanctions, the Iraqi economy lies in tatters. The Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement and other humanitarian organizations can only hope to mitigate some of the worst effects of the sanctions. ICRC activities on behalf of Iraqi civilians, 1999-2000 Eight years of war with Iran (1980-88) followed by the Gulf war of 1990-1 left Iraq and the Iraqi people exhausted. The economy and, as a result, the infrastructure of the country lay in ruins. Now, after nine years of trade sanctions, imposed by the UN after Iraq's invasion of Kuwait in August 1990, the situation of the civilian population is increasingly desperate. Deteriorating living conditions, inflation, and low salaries make people's everyday lives a continuing struggle, while food shortages and the lack of medicines and clean drinking water threaten their very survival. 1. Health and nutrition The comprehensive trade embargo, which was imposed in August 1990 to incite Iraq to withdraw its troops from the recently-invaded Kuwait, has been renewed a number of times since then (After Iraq's invasion of Kuwait in August 1990, the Security Council imposed strict conditions on Iraq, demanding full disclosure, inspection and destruction of the country's biological, chemical, ballistic and nuclear weapon stockpiles and development programmes. Iraq was also ordered to pay reparations to Kuwait to compensate the victims of the invasion. The imposition of sanctions meant the suspension of customary trade and financial relations -- i.e. restrictions on the sale of Iraqi oil and the freezing of the country's assets. Meanwhile, Iraqi forces attempted to put down Kurdish and Shiite rebellions in the north and south. This led US and UK forces to impose two "no-fly" zones in the north and south. Despite attempts to have UN sanctions eased, the Security Council decided in 1993, and every year since, to maintain the economic embargo, because it concluded that Iraq had not fully complied with its obligations.). The Security Council has set up numerous mechanisms for exemptions from the sanctions regime, notably under UN Security Council resolutions 661 (1990), 687 (1991), 706 (1991), 712 (1991) and 986 (1995). Oil-for-food -- chronology 14 April 1995 Resolution 986 was adopted by the UN Security Council. Iraq subsequently refused to accept its terms. 10 December 96 The pumping of oil began under the Memorandum of Understanding (MoU). Phase I of the programme officially began. 20 March 97 The first shipment of commodities under Phase I was cleared. 2 April 97 The distribution of wheat flour began throughout the country. 9 May 97 The first medical supplies under Phase I arrived via Trebil (on the border with Jordan). 4 June 97 The Security Council adopted Resolution 1111 approving the 6-month extension of the operation and authorizing another US$2 billion in oil sales, beginning on 8 June. 8 June 97 Phase II of the programme began. 1 August 97 For the first time, Iraqis received all ten items in the monthly food basket at the levels envisaged in MoU. October 97 The results of the FAO-WFP Special Report on Food Supply and Nutrition Assessment were published. The report found that, although the situation had improved following implementation of SCR 986, malnutrition remained a serious problem throughout Iraq. November 97 A UNICEF report was published showing that 32% of Iraqi children under 5 were chronically malnourished, i.e. a rise of 72% since 1991. 4 December 97 The Security Council adopted Resolution 1143, formally extending the Oil-for-Food operation for another 6 months with the same ceiling of $US 2 billion in oil sales. 5 December 97 Phase III officially began. 20 January 98 The first medical contract under Phase II (vaccines for infants) was cleared at Trebil. 1 February 98 The UN Secretary General issued his Supplementary Report offering new proposals to improve the process for the approval of contracts and goods delivery. The report recommended enhancing the food basket with additional calories and animal proteins, and proposed that the ceiling of US$ 2 billion in oil sales every six months, which had proven inadequate to meet the needs of the Iraqi people, be raised to US$ 5.2 billion gross (US$3.4 billion for the humanitarian allocation). 20 February 98 The Security Council adopted Resolution 1153 in support of the Supplementary Report of the Secretary General. 19 March 98 The first shipment of food and related items under Phase III crossed the border at Trebil. 2 April 98 One year after the start of distribution of SCR 986 goods, nearly five million tonnes of foodstuffs had reached Iraq. 29 May 98 The Secretary General approved the Distribution Plan, based on a net humanitarian allocation of US 3.1 billion. This represented more than a doubling of the programme. 30 May 98 With Security Council Resolution 1153, the new and enhanced phase of Oil for Food operation began. 4 June 98 Results of a joint Ministry of Health-UN survey showed increased attendance at health-care centres and greater availability of drugs and medicines following implementation of SCR 986. In 1999, the quantities of oil sold for the first time reached the level allowed under the programme ($5.26 billion/180 days under Phase VI). On 4 October 99, the Security Council increased the ceiling on the value of oil that Iraq is allowed to export by $3.04 billion for the 180-day period that began on 25 May. The estimated revenue for Phase VI is $7.464 billion. IV. ICRC position in relation to the embargo
Active in Iraq since 1980, but particularly since 1990, the International Committee of the Red Cross has been deeply concerned to observe the consequences, in humanitarian terms, of the slow but steady deterioration of living conditions in the country since the 1991 Gulf war. On several occasions the ICRC has drawn the attention of the international community to this situation, in particular through regular high-level contacts, in its emergency appeals and in its annual reports. The ICRC endeavours to provide a rapid response to some of the needs which are not covered by the oil-for-food programme. In 1999, it extended its planned annual budget of US$9 million for Iraq by 60%, in order to finance new projects in two vital sectors: health, and water and sanitation. Meanwhile, other organizations are focusing their programmes on combating malnutrition within the Iraqi population. UNOHCI, the United Nations Humanitarian Coordination for Iraq, is the ad hoc agency coordinating implementation of SCR 986. All UN agencies, apart from UNHCR, are involved in their specific fields in supervising implementation of the oil for food programme, through small but regular programmes. A small number of NGOs is active in central Iraq, mainly in the primary health and education sectors. There are considerably more NGOs in northern Iraq, many of them implementing programmes under SCR 986. PROFILE of four hospitals and one health centre In the 400-bed Al Karama Teaching Hospital in Baghdad, which is fairly typical of Iraq's 18 large referral hospitals, according to the director "nothing works except the physicians". Situated in a very poor part of the city with high population growth, the hospital has all medical and surgical specialties, and is one of the largest teaching hospitals in Baghdad. Yet it is unable to function properly owing to a series of chronic problems. The electrical system is erratic; the ventilation and elevators are out of order. The hospital sewage-treatment plant has not been working for years. In the wards lie rusty beds without wheels, with dirty mattresses with holes. There is a lack of soap, gauze, syringes, i.v. lines and fluids. Only two of the hospital's six operating theatres are in use, and these are working on a very basic level. Lamp bulbs and trolleys are broken. The basic rules of hygiene and asepsis are not observed owing to a lack of detergents, disinfectants and water. The central oxygen supply is out of order, and few anaesthesia machines are working. There is a shortage of painkillers, especially those used for post-operative care. Lifesaving procedures cannot always be performed owing to a lack of drugs, monitoring equipment or specific treatment. There are also few functioning diagnostic tools. As a result, the number of planned, non-emergency operations has greatly decreased. All this clearly has a disastrous effect on the quality of the treatment administered, and on the patients' health in general. Basra Teaching Hospital. This is a major surgical teaching hospital with all subspecialities including orthopaedics, neurosurgery, chest surgery and ophthalmology. It not only serves the population of Basra (1.2 million) but is also the main surgical referral hospital for the entire southern part of the country (4 million). The director of the hospital tells of an incident during an operation when leakage from the toilet on the floor above dripped through the ceiling into the abdomen of his patient (the patient survived!). Because of a design fault when the hospital was built in the 1980s, waste water seeps through the piping, out through the walls and ceilings. In the corridors, cracked and bulging floors reveal frequent flooding. The entire basement, in which service outlets, electricity cables, sewage systems, and pumping equipment are located, is completely inaccessible, inundated under a foot of flood water; stray dogs and rats have made it their home. The director of Al-Rashad Psychiatric Hospital, the only hospital in the country for chronic psychotic patients, is desperate. Deficiencies in the buildings, shortages of medicines and facilities make it impossible to give the patients adequate care. For instance, there are no antipsychotic tablets and few injections; ECT (electroconvulsive therapy) is given to the patients when they are awake, as there are no anaesthetics. The doctors have missed all the latest advances in antipsychotic drugs of the last ten years. The patients, half-starved and wearing torn but clean nightshirts, can be seen lying on broken beds, or on foam mattresses on the floor, or gathering in unruly groups in the courtyard. Ibn-al Khatib Hospital, located in a very poor semi-rural district on the outskirts of Baghdad, is the infectious diseases hospital for all of Baghdad. The dysfunctional cooling system is responsible for most of the hospital's problems. On the roof, old air compressors lie rusty and broken. Where their pipes and wires penetrate the roof, deep-running cracks have formed in the cement blocks, and water has dripped through the holes. Beneath, there are large puddles in the corridors and cracks in the walls and ceilings. The kitchens are unusable, the toilets unspeakable. In summer, the hospital is so hot that the (infected) patients go home at night to sleep and return to hospital in the morning. The lifts are out of order, as is the internal phone system. Fethaliya Health Centre, in a very poor, industrialized area on the outskirts of Baghdad, is in an exceptionally bad state. Two doctors and two dentists see 400 patients every day. The dilapidated state of the premises makes it clear that rebuilding, not repairing, is the only option for this vital health centre, which serves a population of 130,000, above all pregnant women, babies and young children. Inside, the few rickety pieces of furniture and the dearth of medical equipment give ample testimony as to the standard of treatment administered here. Medicines seem on the whole to be available, thanks to the "oil-for-food" programme, but there are evident storage difficulties. During the long power cuts each day, the vaccines are moved from the refrigerator to a makeshift cold box. The centre urgently needs its own electricity generator. 2. ICRC water and sanitation projects Water and sanitation has long been a major area of ICRC activity in Iraq. The destruction of power stations and water pumping and treatment plants during the 1991 Gulf war created an emergency situation without precedent in only a few weeks, in which millions of people were without safe drinking water. The ICRC responded immediately to the emergency, working with a number of National Red Cross Societies. Plastic bags of purified water were rushed to hospitals, medical centres and other establishments, and the chemicals needed to treat and disinfect water distributed through the mains were delivered to the Baghdad water board. In hard-hit areas, emergency storage and distribution centres were set up and water brought in by tanker truck. These activities were subsequently extended to the provinces. In wartime, the damage is done all too fast. Repairing and rebuilding can take forever. In Iraq's case, the sanctions imposed on it since 1990 have meant that it has been difficult to rehabilitate the water-treatment facilities, with devastating consequences for the systems which distribute water to the civilian population. Today, the problems are so overwhelming that the few qualified technical staff in the country are unable to cope. Nearly all the meagre resources available are being used to try to provide drinking water, while the treatment of polluted water and sewage is neglected. 2.1. The driest year since 1932 The water installations now face an additional challenge -- the worst drought in decades. A mere 50 mm of rain has fallen so far in 1999, 5% of the annual average. At the beginning of the year, Saddam dam north of Mosul contained only 9% of its total capacity. The potential consequences for agriculture and drinking water supplies are devastating. Water levels in rivers are so low that some water-treatment plants have come to a standstill, as river water no longer reaches the intake points which pump the water to the plant. The Iraqi water board has no solution to this alarming situation, and UN Resolution 986, which at the best of times provides slow and incomplete solutions to the serious water and sanitation problems in Iraq, does not make provision for such exceptional situations. ICRC response to the emergency The ICRC, which since 1991 has contributed to the rehabilitation of 155 of Iraq's 1,500 water purification plants, launched emergency measures in May 1999, with the long-term goal of guaranteeing the population a minimum of 20 litres per person per day, and water and sanitation services in accordance with WHO standards. Vulnerable river-intake structures are being extended and new ones installed, thus ensuring that water still reaches the pumps that take it to the plants for treatment, despite lower river levels. 23 water and sanitation projects had been completed so far this year, benefiting a total of 3.5 million people. Another eight emergency projects are currently being implemented, some by ICRC water and sanitation teams and others by local contractors. Most of these projects are in response to the extremely low water levels in the rivers and therefore concern modifications to the river-intake structures. However, only part of the drought-related problems can be solved by site interventions. To address the worsening quality of raw water, the ICRC responds positively to requests for additional chemicals (HTH, Polyelectrolyte, and Round-up). 48.6 tons of polyelectrolyte are being supplied to Baghdad's major water plant, Karkh, which covers the needs of 3.4 million people. Polyelectrolytes are a useful additive to local aluminium sulphate in water purification under exceptional circumstances such as drought. The ICRC is also providing disinfectant for rural water supply schemes (100 tonnes of chlorine powder) to counteract the deterioration in the quality of untreated water. As expected, the electricity situation is no better this year than last. The ICRC has responded by repairing twenty generators in the capacities from 75 to 1,000 kVA which will enable water-treatment plants to increase their production.
In parallel to the emergency projects, the ICRC water and sanitation programme for 1999 continues to be implemented as planned. Thus, five water-treatment plants and one sewage- lifting station, covering the needs of 550,000 people, have undergone major rehabilitation. In addition, teams of ICRC technicians have carried out maintenance on 11 other water- treatment plants. 2.2. Northern Iraq Concerned by the effects of water shortages triggered by the current drought in Iraq, the ICRC is finalizing an assessment of the living conditions of more than 60 sites accommodating internally displaced people in the city of Arbil, with a view to making the necessary sanitary improvements. VI. Other ongoing ICRC activities in Iraq
After the air strikes, the ICRC provides relief items and medical assistance where necessary. 2. A major programme since 1994 -- assistance for amputees As a result of the 1980-1988 Iran-Iraq war, the 1991 Gulf war and the presence of landmines, there is a considerable number of military and civilian amputees in Iraq. Before the 1991 Gulf war the Iraqi health care system had an efficient prosthetic/orthotic service caring for amputees and other disabled persons. With three workshops, and using French and German technology, this service covered the needs of the entire country. The quality of medical care for amputees in Iraq having steadily declined since 1991, the ICRC offered the authorities its support for physical rehabilitation services in Iraq. The ICRC prosthetic/orthotic programme was initiated in 1994 under a cooperation agreement with the Iraqi Ministry of Health and has been consolidated over the past five years with additional projects conducted with the Ministries of Defence and Higher Education. It has adopted alternative technology, with a view to enabling Iraq to run its prosthetic service independently and at lower cost. The ICRC now supports five government-run centres and one centre which is run by the Iraqi Red Crescent Society. In northern Iraq, the ICRC limb-fitting centre in Arbil became operational in 1996. It is run by NORCROSS as a delegated project. Since 1994, more than 7,000 persons have received ICRC prostheses. Of these, over 50% are mine victims. In 1998, a total of 3,096 amputees received prostheses, including 1,699 mine victims (Several million landmines are scattered throughout northern Iraq. These have caused at least 2,400 deaths and 4,000 injuries since 1991). . 3. Prisoners or war and persons unaccounted for Since the end of the Iran-Iraq war, the ICRC has interviewed and supervised the repatriation of around 90,000 Iranian and Iraqi prisoners of war, in accordance with its mandate under the Third Geneva Convention. At the end of the 1991 Gulf War, the ICRC made arrangements for the repatriation of more than 70,000 Iraqi and over 4,000 Kuwaiti and allied prisoners of war, as well as for over 1,300 civilian internees. The ICRC has also constantly pursued its efforts to help the parties trace all persons unaccounted for following this conflict. A Tripartite Commission, comprising representatives of Iraq on the one hand and of France, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, the United Kingdom and the United States of America on the other, under the chairmanship of the ICRC, was created in April 1991 to this end. Since then, the ICRC has chaired the 23 meetings of the Tripartite Commission and 36 sessions of its Technical Sub-Committee set up in December 1994. Since the beginning of 1999, Iraq has not participated in the official meetings. Three consultation sessions took place over the year with representatives of the other countries. 4. Detainees The ICRC also visits detainees from countries that have no diplomatic relations with Iraq, in order to monitor their treatment and conditions of detention, and assists the Iraqi Red Crescent in maintaining and restoring links between separated family members in the region. 5. Activities specific to northern Iraq Following the February 1991 cease-fire and the uprising in northern Iraq, the ICRC provided 200,000 displaced people with relief supplies. At the time it was operating from Baghdad as ICRC delegates, who had voluntarily remained in Iraq during the war, were authorized to cross front lines. In April 1991 offices were opened in Arbil, Dohuk and Sulaymaniyah in northern Iraq. When the conflict between Kurdish factions erupted, the ICRC provided medical care for the wounded and assisted the most needy among the displaced. It also began visiting security detainees held by the two main Kurdish parties. Today, some 500 detained persons are regularly visited by the ICRC. Efforts to settle disputes in northern Iraq have not yet yielded results, and there seems little prospect of internally displaced people being able to return to their homes in the foreseeable future. The ICRC continues to provide emergency aid to families who were forced to flee the fighting and whose homes have been destroyed. In winter 1998-9 some 14,000 families received ad hoc assistance. |