September 21, 2000
Copies of the letters to the government of Iraq and the Security Council are attached.
Human Rights Watch today strongly criticized the government of Iraq for refusing to cooperate with United Nations efforts to assess the country's humanitarian situation. In a letter sent yesterday to the government, Human Rights Watch called on President Saddam Hussein to reconsider its stance of non-cooperation.
In a separate letter to the U.N. Security Council, Human Rights Watch criticized the negative humanitarian impact of "holds" placed on equipment ordered for infrastructure repair, and urged the Council to remove sanctions on the import of civilian goods and financial transactions.
Secretary-General Kofi Annan, in a report last week to the Security Council on the current phase of the oil-for-food program, said that Iraq had refused to issue visas to experts he had selected to conduct a comprehensive assessment of the humanitarian consequences of the sanctions. He also wrote that the government refused to discuss with the U.N. how a "cash component" to the oil-for-food program could allow U.N.-controlled funds to be used to purchase locally produced goods and services.
The same report frequently cited serious problems stemming from protracted holds by the Security Council's sanctions committee on key infrastructure repair items affecting public health. The report underscored the fact that humanitarian relief, no matter how significant, cannot address the overall impoverishment of ordinary people, and noted that many Iraqi families lack the income to purchase basic goods, including fruits, vegetables, and meat products that are available on the market.
"Iraq's stance of non-cooperation is deplorable," said Hanny Megally, executive director of the Middle East and North Africa division of Human Rights Watch. "The government clearly does not place a high priority on addressing the vital needs of ordinary citizens." At the same time, Megally pointed out, the Secretary-General's report painted a disturbing picture of a continuing public health emergency. "One key factor in this is the resistance of the United States in the Security Council to making necessary changes in the sanctions regime," Megally said. "It's unfortunate that the major media stories on the report focused exclusively on Iraq's non-cooperation."
Human Rights Watch wrote to the Security Council in early January to
advocate restructuring the sanctions on Iraq to minimize the impact on
the civilian population by permitting the unrestricted import of
civilian goods and investments in the civilian economy.
His Excellency Saddam Hussein
Dear President Hussein,
Human Rights Watch is writing to express our regret and dismay
concerning your government's refusal to extend requested visas to
experts appointed by United Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan to
address aspects of the ongoing humanitarian emergency in the country. In
his September 8 report to the Security Council (S/2000/857) on the
operation of the oil-for-food program, the Secretary-General wrote that
your government had told his office that it does not intend to cooperate
with experts he was appointing to conduct a comprehensive report and
analysis of the humanitarian situation, and had refused on two occasions
to issue visas to experts authorized to discuss with the government ways
that Iraqi oil revenues controlled by the U.N. could be used for the
purchase of locally produced goods and services.
The same report does note that teams from the World Food Programme (WFP)
and the World Health Organization (WHO) conducted missions in Iraq in
the period under review, and that there were also missions of specialist
consultants to report on conditions in the water and sanitation sector
and the electricity sector. The report also states that the government
"has generally met the requirements of the United Nations for entry
visas for international staff involved in the implementation of
resolution 986 (1995)." The government's rejection of these two
initiatives is inconsistent with this overall policy of cooperation, and
will impede efforts to address in a comprehensive way the humanitarian
consequences of the sanctions.
Human Rights Watch has urged the Security Council on a number of
occasions to commission an independent mechanism to undertake a
comprehensive assessment of the humanitarian crisis in Iraq, and to make
recommendations to both the Security Council and the government to
address that crisis. We therefore welcomed the long-overdue decision in
June of the Security Council, in Resolution 1302 (2000) extending the
oil-for-food program, to authorize the Secretary General to commission
such a study. It has long been our view that this crisis derives in
considerable part from the impact of the comprehensive economic embargo
on Iraq, and that such an independent assessment would likely support
our recommendations for radical changes in the operation of those
sanctions in order to minimize their impact on the civilian population.
The second set of visa requests relate to the need, long-stated by U.N.
and private agencies working in Iraq, for a "cash component" to the
oil-for-food program in order to provide some income to families and
communities, and to train and compensate Iraqi workers and professionals
in installing and maintaining equipment funded under the oil-for-food
program. At present Iraq's oil revenues are controlled by the U.N. and
can only be used to pay for humanitarian-related commodities that are
imported into the country. A "cash component" provision would authorize
the use of some of these revenues to purchase locally produced goods and
services as well.
As this latest report of the Secretary-General
indicated, "locally produced food items, including vegetables, poultry,
eggs, meat and dairy products, have become increasingly available in
markets throughout the country. Unfortunately, most Iraqis do not have
the necessary purchasing power to buy these foods." A cash-component
arrangement would very partially address this aspect of the crisis. The
Security Council finally took the first step towards authorizing such a
program in Resolution 1284 (1999) by asking the Secretary General to
recommend possible operational modalities, given the sharply different
views of the government and some members of the Security Council as to
who would control and allocate these sums.
On a more positive note, we were pleased to read in the report that
bilateral discussions have begun on setting up programs to clear
anti-personnel land mines, something the government until recently has
been unwilling to undertake. We encourage the government to give high
priority to the rapid development of an extensive and effective land
mines clearance project.
In conclusion, Human Rights Watch strongly urges your government to
reconsider its stance of non-cooperation with the earlier-mentioned
initiativesÂto conduct a comprehensive assessment of the humanitarian
crisis and to work with the U.N. to establish a mechanism whereby a
portion of Iraq's oil revenues can be used for local purchases and
hires.
I am attaching to this letter one that Human Rights Watch is also
sending to the U.N. Security Council with regard to the
Secretary-General's report.
Sincerely,
Hanny Megally
September 20, 2000
His Excellency M. Moctar Ouane
Dear Ambassador Ouane,
Human Rights Watch is writing to you concerning the humanitarian crisis
in Iraq, a crisis which derives in considerable measure from the
comprehensive economic sanctions imposed by the Security Council. The
most recent report of the Secretary-General to the Council on the
operation of the oil-for-food program (S/2000/857) notes some recent
improvements, but also stresses the continuing emergency situation in
the public health area.
While the factors contributing to such a complex emergency situation
cannot be reduced to a single cause, the report frequently cites the
problem of protracted holds by the Security Council's sanctions
committee (the "661 committee") on key items. Regarding the
"infrastructural degradation" evident in the water and sanitation
sector, for instance, the report states that "in the absence of key
complementary items currently on hold and adequate maintenance, spare
parts and staffing, the decay rate of the entire system is
accelerating."
Concerning the electricity sector, the capacity and reliability of which
is crucial to water treatment, refrigeration, and public health
generally, the report states that the governorates outside of the
capital continue to experience outages of between twelve and eighteen
hours a day. A fire this August in the Mussaiyab power station increased
these daily outages to up to twenty hours in some governorates. "The
entire electricity grid is in a precarious state and is in imminent
danger of collapsing altogether should another incident of this type
occur," the report states. Twenty-five percent of the electricity sector
contracts submitted to the 661 committee, the Secretary-General writes,
were on hold.
The report states that there have been some improvements in the health
sector but notes the "continuing hold placed on equipment for a
computerized stock management system" and characterizes the overall
provision of health care and services as one of "steep decline."
In its weekly report for the period ending September 15, the Office of
the Iraq Programme (OIP) stated that the total value of contracts on
hold in all sectors was $1.97 billion. Many are on what the
Secretary-General termed "complementary items"--in other words, holds
that often make it impossible to install or operate "central items"
already approved and delivered. The negative humanitarian impact of the
holds is thus greater than the number of contracts or dollar amounts
suggest.
In our letter to the Security Council of January 4, 2000, Human Rights
Watch urged the Council to instruct the 661 committee to introduce
greater transparency into its deliberations by making available
information concerning its decisions and explanations for rejections and
holds placed on contract applications. We regret that so far as we are
aware no such instruction has been issued, and we have seen no greater
transparency in the committee's operations.
Human Rights Watch also urged the Council to establish an independent
framework and mechanism for monitoring the humanitarian impact of
sanctions imposed under its authority. We were encouraged that in June
the Council, in resolution 1302 (2000) extending the operation of the
oil-for-food program, asked the Secretary-General to appoint a group of
independent experts to conduct a comprehensive assessment of the
humanitarian situation in Iraq. We have written separately to the
government of Iraq strongly objecting to its refusal to cooperate with
this mission, as well as its refusal to discuss modalities of a "cash
component" that would allow the use of some of Iraq's oil revenues to
pay for local products and services (copy of letter to the government of
Iraq attached).
We want to stress, however, that this regrettable absence of cooperation
by the government does not diminish the obligation of the Council to
monitor the humanitarian impact of the sanctions on Iraqi society. Many
sectoral studies by U.N. agencies operating in the country are
available, as are the regular reports of the U.N. observation teams and
the recent and forthcoming reports to the Secretary-General of experts
looking at the sectors of food and agriculture, electricity, and water
and sanitation. The findings and recommendations in these reports should
form the basis for Security Council action towards meeting serious
humanitarian needs.
The recently issued Assessment of the Food and Nutrition Situation
technical report by the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO),
for instance, notes that while existing food rations, combined with
market food purchases, have "halted further deterioration in the
nutritional situation, they have not by themselves been able to reverse
this trend." One factor is that the ration diet is lacking in
vegetables, fruit and animal products, including dairy, which are too
costly for many families in the markets. The FAO report also notes that
"malnutrition is often caused by factors other than those related to
food." In particular, poor water supply and sanitation lead to frequent
and repeated infections among children. The report concludes that acute
malnutrition among children under five has decreased only slightly from
the twelve percent recorded in 1995, and that at least 800,000 children
under five are chronically malnourished.
The deterioration of Iraq's civilian infrastructure in areas vital to
public health remains one of the key impediments to addressing the
continuing humanitarian emergency in the country. The other is the
impoverishment of the population, which goes to the heart of the
sanctions strategy. The Secretary-General's report notes, for instance,
that locally produced fruits, vegetables, poultry, eggs, meat, and dairy
products are increasingly available in Iraqi markets. "Unfortunately,"
he writes, "most Iraqis do not have the necessary purchasing power to
buy these foods." The monthly food ration represents the largest
proportion of most household incomes, and "seventy percent of families
barter or sell items in the food basket to obtain other essential
goods."
The Secretary-General's latest report underscores the disturbing fact
that the impact of the sanctions, notwithstanding the achievements of
the oil-for-food program, continues to be felt mainly by ordinary
Iraqis. In the light of this, Human Rights Watch is compelled to call
your attention once again to the key recommendation we made to you in
our January letter: to restructure the sanctions regime in order to
minimize its impact on the civilian population, by permitting the
unrestricted import of civilian goods and investments in the civilian
economy.
We continue to believe that prohibitions must remain on imports
of a military nature, and that the government is likely to use its
greater access to foreign exchange for prohibited purposes. We believe
that there is no way to foreclose that possibility entirely. Indeed,
under present arrangements, goods Iraq now imports using foreign
exchange from smuggling and other sources enter the country unrestricted
and uninspected. Making all imported goods liable to international
inspection at Iraqi ports of entry, if undertaken with the same sense of
purpose that the international community displayed in monitoring and
enforcing the embargo on Yugoslavia in the 1992 - 1995 period, could go
a very long way toward preventing Iraqi government acquisition of
military and dual-use commodities, especially if this is coupled with
continued monitoring of military industries and activities inside the
country.
Human Rights Watch strongly urges the Council once again to address in a
more satisfactory way the humanitarian consequences of the sanctions it
has authorized in Iraq, and to take into account the most basic
humanitarian principles when applying coercive measures that affect the
well-being of the civilian population. We look forward to an opportunity
to discuss these recommendations with you and with the representatives
of other Council member states.
Sincerely,
/s/
Hanny Megally
cc: Heads of permanent missions of Member States of the UN Security
Council
For more information, please contact:
September 20, 2000
President of the Republic of Iraq
c/o HE Dr. Saeed H. Hasan
Permanent Mission of Iraq to the United Nations
14 East 79th Street
New York, NY 10021
Executive Director
Middle East and North Africa Division
Permanent Representative of the Republic of Mali to the United Nations
President of the United Nations Security Council
111 East 69th Street
New York, N.Y. 10021
Executive Director
Middle East and North Africa Division
Joe Stork (in Washington), 202 612 4327
Hanny Megally (in New York), 212 216 1230
Hania Mufti (in London), 44 207 713 1995
More Statements on Sanctions Against Iraq
More Information on Sanctions Against Iraq