UN sanctions turn Iraq into land of scavengers

                                 By Malcolm Ruth in Baghdad
                                 The Guardian

                                 14 August 2000

                                 As the heat of the day beats down on the ancient Tigris river,
                                 Athwer Al-Kanimi heaves up another shovelful of dirt and
                                 rocks, and sifts it into a plastic tub. Eventually, there is nothing
                                 but silt, and then – sometimes – the faintest sparkle of gold
                                 dust.

                                 The slender young man and a dozen others stand waist-deep
                                 every morning in the filthy water, panning for gold in a nation
                                 that has been reduced by sanctions to creative coping.

                                 "This is very hard work but I like to do it," said Mr Kanimi, who
                                 sells his cache to a jeweller for about 50p a day. "In the winter,
                                 I find work in a restaurant, but this pays better."

                                 The gold these young men are panning for is not a natural
                                 feature of the Tigris. Long ago, Baghdad's jewellers were so
                                 wealthy that when they cleaned out their shops, small links
                                 and gold filings were simply swept into the river.

                                 Now Iraq is so poor that men are salvaging the detritus of the
                                 past to make ends meet.

                                 A decade after the United Nations imposed a sweeping
                                 economic embargo on the oil-rich nation, ordinary Iraqis are
                                 increasingly finding strength in their history as they get on with
                                 their daily lives.

                                 "We are an ancient civilisation, and 10 years of sanctions
                                 mean nothing compared with that," said Qassem, an artist
                                 and owner of the Halawi Gallery and café in Baghdad.

                                 "We invented the alphabet, the wheel, art and poetry. What can
                                 the American government do to a people like this?"

                                 At first glance, Baghdad appears to be a thriving city of
                                 construction, congestion and commerce. Cars choke
                                 well-maintained roads. Sprawling mosques, grand
                                 government buildings and luxurious private homes are taking
                                 shape, despite a shattered economy. Jewellery store windows
                                 are filled with gold and there is no sign of the bombs that
                                 pounded the city during the Gulf war. But it does not take long
                                 to realise the impact on society of the trade embargo.

                                 Children beg in the souk and sell newspapers or incense on
                                 the street. Periodic power cuts mean sudden darkness and
                                 stifling heat amid an average temperature this summer of 49C
                                 (120C). Inflation is so rampant that many people have taken
                                 second jobs.

                                 Rezak Ahmed drives a taxi by day and works in a pharmacy at
                                 night, barely able to provide for his 10 children, aged between
                                 four and eighteen. "I work all day and night and then I worry
                                 when I'm asleep," said Mr Ahmed, over a cup of sugared tea.

                                 Even nature seems to be conspiring against the people of
                                 Iraq. The summer heat is as omnipresent as President
                                 Saddam Hussein, whose portrait dominates every street
                                 corner. A devastating drought is entering its third year –
                                 imperilling food production in a country with less than 12 per
                                 cent arable land.

                                 "I cannot live this way any longer, and neither should my
                                 children," said Kula Jabar, a former civil servant who now
                                 supports her family with her skill on the sewing machine. "I
                                 cannot afford meat or fruits or pretty clothes for my daughter.
                                 We have sold our luxuries," she said.

                                 In such a battered economy, the culture of baksheesh, or
                                 bribery, is so ingrained that a sign in the lobby of the Ministry of
                                 Oil instructs visitors: "Please leave all gifts with the
                                 receptionist."

                                 Middle-class and wealthier families long ago began selling
                                 possessions to boost their incomes. First, the extra television
                                 and second car. Then the jewellery, carpets and antiques.

                                 But perhaps the saddest sight in Baghdad is the Friday
                                 morning book market, in which whole libraries are laid out for
                                 sale on blankets on Muttanabi street. The collections of books
                                 – art, history, fiction, poetry, literature and scientific works in a
                                 dozen languages – show the depth and breadth of Iraqi
                                 cultural life. More than anything else here, they illustrate that
                                 war and deprivation have destroyed the country's potential to
                                 become a leading social and economic force in the Middle
                                 East.

                                 A UN-controlled oil-for-food programme has meant that the
                                 predominantly Shiite Kurdish provinces in the north are, for the
                                 first time, sharing in Iraqi oil revenues. Quality of life here has
                                 greatly improved, as aid groups and the UN restore services,
                                 build houses and distribute food. In southern and central
                                 areas, the humanitarian programme has staved off famine,
                                 but hardship is pronounced.