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War disabled the most marginalised in
Iraq
According to a recent study,
more than a million people have been disabled on account of the war.
The government and civil society
are not taking care of them, with serious psychological consequences
and tensions within families.
Baghdad (AsiaNews) - More than a million civilians have been
disabled by the war in Iraq, and represent the most marginalised
sector of society. The psychological traumas they bear create
serious imbalances inside their families, and the central government
is not paying enough attention to the problem. The denunciation
comes from Faris al-Ubeidi, an Iraqi researcher, interviewed by the
news agency "Voice of Iraq". Al-Ubeidi explains that the state has
the duty of guaranteeing that those who have been disabled by the
war, but have professional skills, can still participate
productively in the labour force. The problem is that fathers who
have been handicapped and are unable to work feel that they are a
burden on their families, and this generates psychological problems
and tensions.
According to a study conducted by the International Disabled
Persons' Organization - in collaboration with the Iraqi
ministries of labor, health, and social affairs - out of a
population of 26 million inhabitants, after five years of war, over
1 million have been handicapped. Of these, 5,600 are completely
disabled, 100,000 have had limbs amputated, another 100,000 have
been blinded, and another 250,000 are in danger of losing their
vision.
Civil society, the researcher maintains, is instead responsible
for exploiting the Iraqi tragedy in order to collect funds (for
children, refugees, and so on), but without providing in any way for
these other forgotten victims.
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