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Interesting? : War Children
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 Message 1 of 2 in Discussion 
From: Miriam  (Original Message)Sent: 3/20/2003 1:26 PM
 

Please Help

We need donations to buy more sets of photos to show in exhibitions around the United States. These exhibitions have had a big effect on the people who have viewed them. To donate, click here.

Children of the Gulf War US Tour Project aims to draw attention to the devastation of the war and economic sanctions against Iraq. We are organizing an exhibition of the works of the Japanese anti-nuclear photojournalist Takashi Morizumi. His works convey the real. yet hidden. human and environmental prices being paid by the people of Iraq.

The first U.S. photo exhibit was launched at the Berkeley Main Library in November 2002. Our goal is to exhibit through various communities around the country.

The photo exhibit also exposes the the devastation caused by DU - depleted uranium weapons on people and the environment around the world. We are working to ban DU weapons by showing the horrible effects on the civilians and veterans of this new type of nuclear war.

The Children of the Gulf War US Tour Project is based in the San Francisco Bay Area. We are working with organizations in Atlanta, Georgia and Hiroshima, Japan.

To view our information in Japanese, click here:



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Reply
 Message 2 of 2 in Discussion 
From: MiriamSent: 3/20/2003 1:38 PM
Children and War
Read more about children and war

Some things for you to think about:

WAR HARMS EVERYONE, ESPECIALLY CHILDREN.

Armed conflicts are a global scourge with devastating effects on children. Estimated numbers of child victims of armed conflicts during the past decade:

  • Killed: 2 million.
  • Disabled: 4-5 million.
  • Left homeless: 12 million.
  • Orphaned or separated from their families: more than 1 million.
  • Psychologically traumatized: some 10 million.

CHILD SOLDIERS

In recent years, in some 25 countries, thousands of children under age 16 have fought in wars. In 1988 alone, there were as many as 200,000 child combatants.

REFUGEES AND DISPLACED POPULATIONS

In 1995, 53 million people - one out of every 115 people on earth - were uprooted from their homes, either displaced within their countries or refugees across borders.

  • Women and children usually comprise 80% of the refugee and displaced populations.
  • Up to 5% of refugee populations - often more in cases of panic evacuation - are children separated from their families.

CHILDREN'S TRAUMA

War leaves emotional, as well as physical, scars on children - trauma that can cause long-term developmental difficulties unless recognized and treated.

A nationwide UNICEF survey of 3,000 children in Rwanda in 1995 found that they had been exposed to "unprecedented levels of exposure to traumatic events" during the genocidal massacres in 1994: over 95% of the children witnessed massacres, and over a third had seen the murders of family members; almost all believed they would die; and nearly two thirds were threatened with death. Over 80% had had to hide to protect themselves, many for up to 8 weeks or longer.

ANTI-PERSONNEL MINES (Landmines)

In 64 countries, an estimated 110 million of these hidden killers - 1 for every 20 children around the world - lie in wait for unsuspecting footfalls.

  • Financial costs: $3 to $10 to buy one; $300 to $1000 to remove one.
  • Human costs: 800 deaths a month, mostly innocent civilians, with thousands more maimed for life.