Act to Save the
Children of Iraq
by Mairead Corrigan Maguire*, August 2002
August 6, 2002 (Hiroshima Day) marked the 12th
year of the economic sanctions against Iraq. These economic sanctions
were described to me during my visit to Iraq by an Iraqi teenager
as being a "silent nuclear bomb that drops into every home
and is slowly destroying not only the children but the whole Iraqi
nation.” Well over a half million Iraqi children have died
of malnutrition and preventable diseases (resulting from the after-effects
of the Gulf War and continuing economic sanctions) and each day
more children die unnecessarily.
Now, as the Bush Administration is making extremely
clear, Iraq is in serious danger of an all-out US assault in the
coming months. This week when the Iraqi government offered weapons
inspections, the American administration responded by saying it
is not about weapons inspections. Rather than going into yet another
war causing further untold suffering to Iraqi civilians (also
effecting the Middle East and the entire human family, as we are
now so interconnected), every diplomatic option must be tried
to divert war. The age of wars has gone, such barbaric activity
is not acceptable at any time. But even for those who believe
in war, it should not be acceptable when diplomatic options are
readily available as has been, and continues to be, the case with
Iraq.
The American Government has a responsibility to
uphold its democratic constitution, abide by international law,
and respect the democratic wishes of many American people and
the vast majority of governments and peoples of the world, who
are calling for a non-violent solution to this crisis. War on
our Iraqi brothers and sisters would be a war on the spirit and
dignity of the entire human family.
We are currently in the UN Decade for a Culture
of Peace and Non-Violence for the Children of the World (2001-2010).
This challenges us all to focus on the children and do all in
our power to see they have clean water, food, medicine, and a
safe environment and safe world. Children in Iraq do not have
these things because of UN/USA/UK sanctions. The continuing death
and suffering of Iraqi children is preventable. Let us therefore
prevent it.
Oppose US war against Iraq and work for diplomatic
options, including the lifting of economic trade sanctions against
the Iraqi people, who have been living and dying under these brutal
sanctions and effects of war for too long.
*Mairead Corrigan Maguire, a member of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation’s
Advisory Council, is a Nobel Peace Laureate from Northern Ireland
and a founder of Peace People.
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