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September 03, 2007
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Monday
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Sha'aban 20, 1428
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Iraqi children robbed of their childhood
By Ahmed Ali
BAQUBA: The violence around the continuing US military operations in this city has robbed children of their childhood.
Only two provincial schools and one private kindergarten school are functioning in this city of 280,000, located 50 km north of Baghdad. Most children know neither school nor play.
Or even the food they want. “We parents can hardly meet the basic requirements of food,” Mahdi Hassan, a father of four, told the news agency.
“Nobody even mentions chocolate or pastries or anything else because Iraqis know they are not important,” Baquba resident Wissam Jafar said. “Children eat what the other members of the family eat. Toys and games are offered only at festivals and on special occasions.”
Baquba city, capital of Diyala province, has been at the centre of major US military operations to fight Al Qaeda like forces. People have suffered from the violence from both sides.
By now Iraq has seen a generation of children pass with just survival a major issue. During the period of economic sanctions imposed on Iraq in the 1990s, more than half a million children died, according to the United Nations.
Schoolteachers and managers spoke to the news agency of the problems facing children who do manage to go to school.
“Teaching has been hit by the political situation in Iraq,” said Salma Majid, manager of a local primary school. “Children can often not get to the school, and we may have more than three days off in a week.
The whole academic year may be delayed because the violence has been so extreme this year.”
Schools can provide children a chance to play but sometimes it is not safe,” she said.—Dawn/The IPS News Service
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