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Church relief convoy delivers items to Iraq


From "NewsDesk" <NewsDesk@UMCOM.ORG>
Date Thu, 8 May 2003 14:58:59 -0500

May 8, 2003  News media contact: Linda Bloom7(212)870-38037New York
10-71BI{271}

By Guy Hovey*

BAGHDAD, Iraq (UMNS) - The threat of being hijacked along the highway to
Baghdad is a concern shared by many people and one of the dangers the Middle
East Council of Churches convoy faced as it traveled from Jordan to Iraq's
capital in early May to deliver much needed relief items.

The convoy of six trucks, driven by local Iraqis, was loaded with 250 winter
tents, 19,200 cans of meat, 1,000 food packets consisting of oil, tea, beans,
sugar, rice and detergents, 6,380 blankets, 2.2 tons of BP5 high-protein
biscuits and a 40-foot container of medicines.

Several members of the Action by Churches Together - Norwegian Church Aid,
International Christian Orthodox Charities, Church World Service - donated
the relief items. The medicines, immediately delivered to hospitals in the
area, were donated by Diakonie Austria, another ACT member.

The United Methodist Committee on Relief, a member of ACT, is working in Iraq
through those and other ecumenical partners. 

MECC coordinator Edmond Adam said the items were brought in for a
pre-positioned emergency stockpile because of fear that current rations -
distributed to people by the old Iraqi regime under the oil for food program
- will run out by midyear.

At that point, people could start experiencing severe food shortages. "The
outlook is bleak if people don't start earning salaries soon enabling them to
buy food," Adam explained. The stockpile is at the Old Ancient Church of the
East in Baghdad. 

The MECC stockpile is enough for 1,000 families in Baghdad and Mosul, but
Adam is realistic about how far the supplies will stretch and noted that
"millions of families could be without adequate food in a couple of months."

His view was reinforced by ACT Regional Coordinator Eszter Nimeth, who added
that "as the food for oil scheme was administered by the Iraqi Ministry of
Trade, the distribution system is no longer in place."

It would appear that Iraq is heading for a classic "cash famine," as families
are unable to buy available food due to a shortage of work, cash and rising
prices. Already, a kilo of apples can cost a month's salary, she said.

One problem is that government work places have been destroyed. "The
coalition says that people should return to work, but how can they when their
places of work have been destroyed or looted? There's nothing to go back to,"
Adam said.

There are also worries about possible outbreaks of disease, as already
inadequate water supplies have been potentially contaminated by untreated
sewage from broken-down treatment plants. Adam believes that water-born
diseases could pose a threat this summer, "although reports from the north of
the country say that current disease levels are not above the norm."

Nimeth advocates for flexible and rapid funding from ACT donors. "What is
needed is the ability to be able to react immediately when a crisis is
identified," she explained.

United Methodists can help through donations to UMCOR, earmarked for the Iraq
Emergency Advance No. 623225-4. Checks may be dropped in local church
collection plates or mailed directly to UMCOR at 475 Riverside Dr., Room 330,
New York, NY 10115. Credit-card donations can be made by calling (800)
554-8583.

# # #

*Hovey works for the United Methodist Committee on Relief and is a
credentialed correspondent for United Methodist News Service in the Middle
East.

*************************************
United Methodist News Service
Photos and stories also available at:
http://umns.umc.org


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