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- <text id=91TT0838>
- <link 93XP0306>
- <title>
- Apr. 22, 1991: Refugees:Death Every Day
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Apr. 22, 1991 Nancy Reagan:Is She THAT Bad?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 36
- REFUGEES
- Death Every Day
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Relief organizations are in a grim race to get aid to the Kurds
- before the toll from hunger, cold and disease takes a terrible
- leap--and so far the helpers are running behind
- </p>
- <p>By George J. Church--Reported by Ron Ben-Yishai/Uludere, William
- Mader/London and J.F.O. McAllister/Washington
- </p>
- <p> In the morning, men dug three small holes in the ground
- on the slopes of Dugen mountain, barely inside the Turkish
- border with Iraq and near the town of Uludere. Crying softly,
- a young woman approached through heavy rain, opened a blanket
- held close to her chest and handed the body of an infant swathed
- in a burial cloth to a man in a large turban. He laid the small
- body in a hole already filling with water; he and others
- shoveled in earth. The men crouched and, as one prayed aloud,
- murmured after him in low voices. Their faces, and those of the
- women of the mother's family who huddled, nearby showed only
- numbed resignation.
- </p>
- <p> Little wonder. Death is becoming not just an everyday but
- a many-times-a-day phenomenon among the Kurdish refugees camped
- along the border. That morning on Dugen mountain, nearly 6,600
- ft. above sea level, two more babies who had died the night
- before were buried. The milk in their mothers' breasts had
- dried up because the women were ill nourished and exhausted from
- flight. So the infants were fed a little sugar dissolved in
- water melted from dirty snow. That drink gave them fatal
- diarrhea.
- </p>
- <p> Conditions practically guarantee more deaths. "There are
- sometimes up to 40 people living under the same tent," reports
- Dr. Gerard Salerio of the voluntary organization Medecins du
- Monde (Doctors of the World), who returned to Paris from Uludere
- late last week. "These are not even tents; they are stretched
- blankets. People are too ashamed to relieve themselves during
- the day, so they do it at nighttime, between the tents. There
- is no hygiene anywhere." One doctor serves 100,000 people. As
- a result, says Salerio, "every day, 20 children are buried
- between the tents. Older people are dying too; so are younger
- adults. They are dying, dying even as I speak."
- </p>
- <p> Many more will die unless massive help from outside
- arrives quickly. But attempts to coordinate an international
- relief effort got off to a late start. At the end of last week,
- however, U.S. military forces stepped in to begin a major
- effort. Some 50 big helicopters will ferry food, blankets and
- tents to Kurds on otherwise inaccessible mountaintops. U.S.
- soldiers will enter Iraq to set up organized refugee camps to
- replace the sprawls of squatters. The undertaking, dubbed
- Operation Provide Comfort, aims at supplying at least one meal
- a day to 700,000 Kurds for a month or so, until the U.N. and
- private relief organizations can pull themselves together enough
- to take over.
- </p>
- <p> Will even that be enough to keep the death rate from
- taking a terrible leap? If not, it is hard to see what would do
- so. At week's end Washington counted $245 million contributed
- or pledged by 26 nations for relief since April 1, about $45
- million from the U.S. But these sums are far from adequate.
- Moreover, not much of the money has yet reached the refugees in
- the form of food, water, tents, blankets, medicine and other
- supplies.
- </p>
- <p> Worse, distribution of whatever goods have come close to
- the Turkish frontier has been held up by some appalling snafus.
- Late in the week 21 planeloads of relief supplies had been
- delivered to the eastern Turkish town of Diyarbakir, but much
- of the material failed to get past the airport. Other supplies
- are rotting in the rain aboard trucks stuck on the dirt roads
- of southeastern Turkey.
- </p>
- <p> Turkish authorities say they have been overwhelmed by the
- sheer mass of refugees. The total number of northern Kurds and
- southern Shi`ites fleeing toward Iran or Turkey is estimated at
- almost 2 million. Many, like the 200,000 or so on the
- mountaintops around Turkish Hakkari, can be reached only by dirt
- roads often made impassable by mud. "We can send aid only on
- mules," says a Turkish official.
- </p>
- <p> Another reason exists for the Kurds' sufferings: the Turks
- adamantly refuse to let many of them cross the frontier. The
- Turks fear that the refugees will join Kurdish Turks in forming
- a political bloc demanding more autonomy than Ankara is willing
- to grant.
- </p>
- <p> The Kurds on Dugen mountain are not permitted to descend
- into the valley below because that would mean allowing them
- deeper into Turkey. So about 20 Turkish doctors waiting with
- medicine and ambulances in Cizre, 29 miles away, cannot reach
- them; the vehicles cannot navigate the dirt track up the
- mountain. Every once in a while, when the track dries out a bit,
- Turkish soldiers send up a tractor-trailer piled with loaves of
- bread--the only food that reaches the refugees. On the
- mountaintop, the trailer is swarmed by struggling, fighting
- Kurds. The Turkish soldiers fire shots in the air and even swing
- rifle butts to hold back the crowd, but in vain; within minutes
- the trailer is stripped of its cargo. U.S., British and French
- pilots drop some supplies into the mountains by parachute from
- cargo planes, but nowhere near enough to alleviate most of the
- suffering.
- </p>
- <p> Officials of both international relief organizations and
- governments insist that the greatest imaginable humanitarian
- assistance can only be a temporary palliative for the pain
- suffered by refugees in hordes as vast as those of the Kurds and
- Shi`ites. In the long run, officials say, there must be a
- political solution that would make it possible for the refugees
- either to return to their homes or to find some place where they
- can settle permanently.
- </p>
- <p> Unfortunately, that is somewhat like saying the ideal
- Arab-Israeli solution would be one pleasing to both Ariel Sharon
- and Yasser Arafat: true enough, but terribly hard to envision.
- The refugees insist that they will never feel safe in Iraq with
- Saddam Hussein in power, but the U.S. and its allies are as
- loath as ever to become enmeshed in the long civil war that may
- be required to topple the dictator. There seems to be little
- hope of persuading any of Iraq's neighbors to let in unlimited
- numbers of Kurds: Syria and Iran, which have large indigenous
- Kurdish populations, share Turkey's fears of internal political
- disruption.
- </p>
- <p> British Prime Minister John Major elaborated an idea first
- advanced by Turkish President Turgut Ozal for a stopgap
- solution: U.N.-sanctioned "enclaves" (later changed to "safe
- havens") inside Iraq where the refugees would be protected from
- attack by Saddam's forces. The idea, as such, proved difficult
- for some members of the U.N. Security Council. Such powers as
- the Soviet Union, China and India feared setting a precedent of
- intervention in what have always been considered internal
- affairs that could someday be applied to their treatment of the
- Baltic republics, Tibet or Kashmir. Washington saw little chance
- of getting a resolution through the Security Council.
- </p>
- <p> The U.S., however, accomplished somewhat the same purpose
- unilaterally. Backed by Britain and France, it warned Saddam not
- to use either fixed-wing aircraft or helicopters north of the
- 36th parallel, with the implicit threat that if he did they
- would be shot down, and not to employ armed forces of any kind
- to interfere with relief work anywhere in Iraq. The less than
- 10% of Iraq that lies north of the parallel takes in all the
- areas where the Kurdish refugees are now concentrated. So
- Washington's action in effect establishes most of northern Iraq
- as a safe haven in which Kurdish refugees would be protected
- from attack and U.N. and other officials could distribute relief
- unhindered. That would also foil two of Saddam's objectives: to
- tighten his control by pushing rebellious populations clear out
- of the country and to use refugees in effect as an offensive
- weapon by forcing them across frontiers in numbers large enough
- to disrupt the societies of neighboring countries.
- </p>
- <p> The danger is that a safe haven will become the
- semipermanent home of Kurds who will turn into an embittered,
- stateless and disruptive population. But no political solution
- to prevent that can be quickly engineered, and the search for
- one must not be allowed to distract anyone from the immediate
- problem. That is, quite simply, to save the lives of the
- thousands of Kurds who will die every day that foot-dragging,
- bureaucratic bumbling and political maneuvering delay
- desperately needed relief.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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