Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2004/05/18

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Subject: [Leica] Documentary Photography Book Review
From: kitmc at acmefoto.com (Kit McChesney)
Date: Tue May 18 13:36:49 2004

Another member of the LUG posted a note earlier, and I apologize for not
remembering who it was, basically wondering why our leaders don't seem to
understand the costs of war, especially with regard to what we are
discussing. I think our so-called leaders rarely consider what war actually
means in human terms when they decide we're going to "have a war." Witness
Robert McNamara's "performance" in the recent film Fog of War if you want to
see what has, and continues, to go on behind the scenes. It's sickening. 

I hate to say it, but it seems to me that profiteering is the motive for
most wars, though we'd like to think otherwise. Documentary photography just
proves what we hate to admit, but already know, is terribly wrong with our
world. Thank goodness for photojournalists who are not afraid to risk life
and limb to show us the truth, even if we can't bear to look at it. 

Kit

-----Original Message-----
From: lug-bounces+kitmc=acmefoto.com@leica-users.org
[mailto:lug-bounces+kitmc=acmefoto.com@leica-users.org] On Behalf Of George
Lottermoser
Sent: Tuesday, May 18, 2004 1:09 PM
To: Leica Users Group
Subject: RE: [Leica] Documentary Photography Book Review

Kit McChesney5/18/04
>George, thank you for sharing this with us. Thank you very much. 

Well you're certainly welcome. And apparently we can self-assign a more
current documentary project to follow-up in this tradition:

from: News.independent.co.uk

Rise in birth deformities blamed on Allies' deadly weaponry

By Nigel Morris

13 May 2004

The number of babies born deformed and children suffering leukaemia
have soared because of the "deadly legacy" of depleted uranium shells used
by British and American forces in Iraq, human rights campaigners claimed
yesterday.

Releasing details of health problems and human rights violations
suffered by Iraqi children in the past year, they claim the country's
youngsters faced a worse existence today than they did under Saddam
Hussein's dictatorship.

Depleted uranium was widely used by Allied forces to penetrate Iraqi
tank armour in the Gulf Wars of 1991 and again last year.

Opponents claim the dust it releases upon impact is rapidly absorbed
into the body, causing an upsurge of serious health problems
inherited by Iraqi children during the past 13 years from their parents.

Caroline Lucas, a Green Party Euro-MP who recently visited Basra,
said doctors there had told her that the number of children born with
severe deformities, such as shortened limbs or eye defects, had increased
sevenfold since 1991. In addition they were treating several
new cases of leukaemia every week - before 1991 the condition was
very rare.

"Women in Basra are afraid to become pregnant because there are so
many deformed babies," she said. "We are leaving a deadly legacy for
generations to come."

She made the claims at the launch in London of a new charity, Child
Victims of War (CVW), to help Iraqi youngsters "innocently suffering
malnutrition, disease, disability and psychological trauma".

The amount of depleted uranium used by coalition forces in the two
Gulf Wars is not known, but some estimates suggest it was 300 tons in 1991
and five times as much last year.

CVW says the number of Iraqi babies born with serious deformities has
risen from 3.04 per thousand in 1991 to 22.19 per thousand in 2001. Babies
born with Downs Syndrome have increased nearly fivefold
and there had been a rash of cases of previously little-known eye
problems.

The Ministry of Defence insists depleted uranium poses a "minimal"
risk to civilians. But, in a finding strongly disputed by the MoD,
researchers recently discovered radiation levels from destroyed Iraqi
tanks to be 2,500 times higher than normal and 20 times higher than
normal in the surrounding area.

Joanne Baker, the director of CVW, who has just returned from Iraq,
said children had also been maimed by cluster bombs, blamed by Human Rights
Watch for "hundreds of preventable civilian deaths".

She said youngsters were also vulnerable both to coalition forces and
local militia resisting western forces.

She said malnutrition had worsened since the Anglo-US invasion and
unpolluted water was in short supply while standards of hospital care had
fallen because of shortages of medical supplies.

Those children who went to school - and a Christian Aid survey showed
two-thirds of poor youngsters did not - were "so malnourished they can't
concentrate".

Ms Baker claimed: "Every child in Iraq had a degree of psychological
trauma.

"I have been to Iraq under Saddam and sanctions - most people know
how bad things were - but what has happened this year has plunged Iraq into
a plight which is actually far, far worse," she said.

Ms Baker added: "I am not an apologist for Saddam but I have spoken
to people saying they suffered terribly and they are in tears saying 'I wish
he was back'.

"If it is worse than sanctions and Saddam then we are really talking
about a humanitarian catastrophe."

CVW has applied to the Charities Commission for charitable status,
and plans to open an office in Iraq to monitor abuses, counsel those who
have been detained, train human rights groups and provide medical help to
young victims of war.

Comment on a photo:

VICTIM OF DEPLETED URANIUM?

At the age of seven, Fadel, from Basra in southern Iraq, developed a
devastating, and extremely rare, liver and kidney complaint which caused her
abdomen to swell dramatically. The condition - which has
only been seen in Iraq since 1991 - is thought to be caused by
abnomally high levels of toxic materials in her body.

She underwent agonising hospital treatment, which involved injections
to draw out the huge amounts of water that accumulated. Her cries of pain
were so loud they could be heard down the hospital corridor.

Fadel's father was serving in the Iraqi army during the first Gulf
War when she was conceived. Fadel is believed to have died shortly after
this photograph was taken.

Fond regards,

G e o r g e   L o t t e r m o s e r,    imagist?

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