Crisis
in Iraq worsening: UN
AP/Yahya
Ahmed)

A
suicide car bomber struck a busy market in the city of Kirkuk on Thursday,
killing seven and wounding 50 people
BAGHDAD
Petroleumworld.com
10 12 07
Iraq's humanitarian crisis is worsening and the
plight of millions of displaced Iraqis is critical, says a grim UN report on
human rights in the war-torn country that was released on Thursday.
" Daily life for the average Iraqi civilian remains extremely precarious," said
the human rights report of the UN Assistance Mission for Iraq (UNAMI) released
in Baghdad, which covers the three months till the end of June.
" The violence remains in large part indiscriminate, targeting public places
where large numbers of people gather to inflict maximum casualties and foment
fears of further descent into chaos and loss of any semblance of state control," it
said.
Most of it is focused in Baghdad, but cities such as Mosul in the north and
Basra in the south had also been shaken by violence, while the situation in
some provinces
such as Diyala, adjoining Baghdad, "remained dire."
" As in the past, civilians bore the brunt of the violence, with casualties
being reported on a daily basis in Baghdad and elsewhere. Both Iraqi law enforcement
personnel and (US-led forces) also continued to suffer casualties as a result
of attacks by insurgency groups."
UN spokesman in Iraq Said Arikat, releasing the report at a news conference,
said the Iraqi government was faced with "relentless violence, continued
opposition to its authority and a rapidly worsening humanitarian crisis."
It appeared powerless to prevent the situation from deteriorating further.
" The government needs to adopt urgent measures to address the deteriorating
human rights situation, including in the rule of law sector," Arikat added.
" The pace of arrests has exceeded the authorities' ability to ensure adequate
judicial oversight for the detainee population" which at the end of June
stood at 44,325 pre-trial and convicted prisoners.
Arikat acknowledged that the situation in the period the July-September period,
which will be analysed in UNAMI's next report, has seen "some improvements."
He added, however, that there was no way of verifying government and US military
claims that the violence levels had dropped and that civilian deaths were down.
The reason was that Iraqi authorities had failed to provide its mortality figures
and data to UNAMI "despite repeated requests."
" We have no way of verifying these claims," Arikat said. "But
we can surmise maybe that there is some ebbing of violence but on the other
hand we can also see a pendulum effect ... In recent days we have seen an upswing.
" We look at the violence in Baghdad and we may see an ebb in one area but
then we can also see a rise in another area. It is known as the hydraulic effect."
Ivana Vaco, UN Human Rights officer, told the news conference that there had
been some discernible changes in the human rights situation in recent months.
" There is a continuation of torture and extra-judicial killings," she
said.
" But this is not to say there hasn't been improvement. The government of
Iraq, the Kurdistan Regional Government and the (US military) have taken measures
which we wholeheartedly welcome," added Vaco, pointing for example to
a commitment by the government to speed up the process of assessing detainees.
" A lot remains to be done but some things are being done," she added.
The report also highlighted the plight of some 2.2 million Iraqis who have fled
Iraq and more than two million who are displaced within Iraq.
Most faced hardships such as lack of food, housing, employment and access to
health care.
Arikat, who has just returned from a tour of some camps for displaced Iraqis
within the country, told AFP that the situation was deteriorating.
" The camps are appalling, there is not enough shelter or water or food.
The situation is critical and worsening," he said.
Story by Bryan Pearson of AFP
AFP 111307 GMT 10 07
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