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Fw: Many Afghan children might die by March (Newsweek)
The Littlest Victims
NEWSWEEK WEB EXCLUSIVE
January 5, 2002 | The winter's death toll won't be
counted until the spring. But for aid agencies working
in Afghanistan, one grim fact is certain: thousands of
Afghan children will not survive to see the thaw. "We
don't know how many children are dying on a day-by-day
basis," UNICEF spokesman Alfred Ironside told
NEWSWEEK. "But we do know that they are. They're dying
of cold, they're dying of hunger, they're dying of
disease."
Afghanistan's troubles have long taken an especially
heavy toll on its youngest citizens. After more than
20 years of war and three years of drought, they are
malnourished and at risk from hazards like land mines
and unexploded bombs. Many have spent their entire
lives in refugee camps either inside or outside their
country's borders. Their infant mortality rate is one
of the highest in the world, with one in four dying
before their fifth birthday from illnesses like
measles, diarrhea and pneumonia.
Winter, inevitably, is the toughest time for
Afghanistan's children. When the United States began
attacking the country's Taliban rulers last October
over their refusal to hand over terror mastermind
Osama bin Laden, aid organizations predicted that the
new outbreak of fighting would prevent the delivery of
desperately needed humanitarian supplies. Carol
Bellamy, executive director of UNICEF, warned that as
many as another 100,000 children could die by March if
they did not get assistance.
For now, this worst-case scenario may have been staved
off. Aid groups have managed to deliver food: UNICEF
has sent in more than 60 relief convoys since
September, and Save the Children's Nilgun Ogun says
her organization was able to drop off several months
worth of supplies before snow made some southern
routes impassable. Nor, for the moment, are there any
indications of epidemics in the region's crowded
refugee camps.
Nonetheless, few aid workers are optimistic. Relief
workers say that local warlords are stealing food
shipments, and the country's poor infrastructure and
continuing instability makes it uncertain whether
convoys will be able to penetrate rural areas. "While
aid might have reached the country, aid within the
country might not be reaching all those who need it,"
says Ironside. "Perhaps the situation is not as dire
as we might have imagined two months ago, [but] tens
of thousands of children remain at risk."
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