War Kids Relief

Name:

I served for 14 months in Iraq as a Captain in the 1st Armored Division. The most needy Iraqi children had an amazing affect on me. This is why I am working on the War Kids Relief to better their lives.

Wednesday, April 19, 2006

Teachers Beheaded in front of students

Reuters reported that separate groups of gunmen entered two primary schools in in the Shaab district in Baghdad on Wednesday and beheaded two teachers in front of their students, according to a Ministry of State for National Security statement. NOTE: This report is still awaiting confirmation.

Yahoo Story: http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060419/ap_on_re_mi_ea/iraq_teachers_slain_5

More than 300 teachers have been murdered throughout Iraq in the last 4 months.

Rising Orphan Numbers

IRAQ: Ministry Copes with Rising Number of Orphans

BAGHDAD, 18 Apr 2006 (IRIN) - 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.”

Child Detainees

BAGHDAD, 18 Apr 2006 (IRIN) - The Iraqi juvenile justice system has suffered from neglect and disruption caused by 25 years of crises, according to officials at the UN’s Children’s Agency, UNICEF.

In an effort to improve the situation, UNICEF has joined local NGOs to work with vulnerable and marginalised groups in Iraq, with particular emphasis on the children currently in detention for criminal offences.

“While it’s critical to address how children in detention are being treated, it’s also crucially important to focus on reducing the vulnerabilities and circumstances that push children…into lifestyles which often result in law-breaking and criminality,” said Roger Wright, UNICEF’s Special Representative for Iraq. Wright was speaking at a three-day conference held in Amman, Jordan, to discuss the matter with senior Iraqi government officials.

Read the rest of the story at http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=52835&SelectRegion=Middle_East&SelectCountry=IRAQ

Finally Some Good News

CBS reported the Iraqi youth national soccer team was in Texas recently to compete in the Dallas International soccer tournament. Their journey was sponsored by Texas oil man Albert Hubbleston. Some of the team members said they were often scared playing soccer in Iraq. In contrast, many of the same kids spent most of their time in Dallas riding bicycles around their host families’ neighborhoods. The Iraqi team did well in the first stages of the tournament, but lost a close game in the quarter finals. The visibly upset kids were comforted by their host families and friends.

Murdering Teachers

London Daily Telegraph reported on the growing number of intellectuals targeted around Iraq and the resulting “unprecedented brain drain as those who can move abroad increasingly do so.” The article said at least 182 academics/university professors have been killed since 2003, with many more kidnappings and attempted murders. 331 school teachers have been murdered in the past four months. The article noted it was originally thought the toppling of Saddam would see a flow of exiled intellectuals returning to Iraq. Instead, the opposite has happened.

Monday, April 17, 2006

Kites Banned in Mosul

Children of Mosul are disappointed because of the banning of flying their kites over the rooftops of their homes. The low flying American helicopters are keeping the children from being able to fly their kites. They mentioned the former Iraqi army helicopters were not flying as low as the American helicopters do. The artilce also mentions that the children are hoping the Americans will understand that they only want to fly their kites.(Almada NP)

Wednesday, April 05, 2006

Education Hampered by Sectarian Violence

The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs posted a story on Wednesday, 5 April 2006 announcing that "Children's education is being severely affected by ongoing sectarian violence say officials at the Ministry of Education." The story quotes official who say "at least 30 percent of Iraqi students are not attending school, with the situation much worse in districts of the capital, Baghdad, where violence has been most in evidence."

The following is a link to the entire report:
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=52563&SelectRegion=Middle_East&SelectCountry=IRAQ