PICTURE this. A four-year-old girl is lying in the arms of a doctor. She has just become motherless. Her pink clothes are bloodied and her eyes stare at something only she can see. She has suffered from a bombing £¨ºäÕ¨£© near her home in southern Iraq. ¡¡
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Every day we see images like this on our televisions. We see young Iraqi children begging for food and water from American and British soldiers as they move through towns and cities towards the capital, Baghdad £¨°Í¸ñ´ï£©¡£ We see these children following grown-ups, carrying bags of belongings almost the same size as their small bodies as they flee their homes in Baghdad. ¡¡¡¡
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They represent just some of the young lives that have been turned upside down by the ongoing war. And they show the terrible price being paid by Iraqi children. ¡¡¡¡
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"Dad, why are the Americans striking us£¿ Are we going to be killed£¿" asks the son of Abu Sinar, an Iraqi engineer. Abu finds it hard to explain this war to his eight-year-old son. ¡¡¡¡
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He tries to comfort him by saying: "The bombs are far away from us. The Americans are fighting the soldiers. We're going to be all right." Even though Abu knows this isn't always the truth. ¡¡¡¡
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In southern parts of the country, like Iraq's second largest city, Basra, the United Nations International Children's Emergency Fund £¨UNICEF£¬ÁªºÏ¹ú¶ùͯ»ù½ð»á£© is working to repair the damage caused by fighting. The organization is working to provide clean water and restore electrical power, said Geoffrey Keele, a UNICEF spokesman. ¡¡¡¡
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But little else can be done. In Baghdad, parents give their children sleeping pills £¨°²ÃßÒ©£© to try and let them escape the sound of exploding bombs. And all the schools are closed. ¡¡¡¡
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"All they can do is listen to and hear the war," said Keele. "There is suffering in Baghdad. It is clear that the bombing is affecting the mental well-being £¨ÐÄÀí½¡¿µ£© of the children." ¡¡¡¡
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Despite UNICEF's efforts, dirty water is being blamed for cholera £¨»ôÂÒ£© outbreaks in southern Iraq. Diarrhea £¨¸¹Ðº£© is spreading among the children, sometimes leading to death. ¡¡¡¡
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Nearly 50 per cent of Iraq's population is under 15 years old. And 30 per cent of them already suffered before the war from malnutrition £¨ÓªÑø²»Á¼£©, according to international aid organizations. ¡¡¡¡
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Now the situation is worse, but continual fighting makes it impossible to count the number who are hungry, sick, injured or even dead. ¡¡
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