Sep 6, 2006

One shot to your heart without breaking your skin; no one has the power to hurt you like your friends.

This lyric (the title) is from India Arie's song Get It Together off the Shark Tale soundtrack, which is really unfortunate considering. Why are some lives/deaths greeted with such little regard while others...? Check out this video filmed by some soldiers in Iraq by clicking the title.

I'll admit I never liked The Crocodile Hunter Steve Irwin. I found him kind of annoying and his show another noneducational joyride that I couldn't stand. It turns out he was quite the zoologist and a big conservationist and that's cool. I feel sad for his family and think how he died was tragic-but not all that unforseeable if you've seen his show. What has appalled me lately is the amount of covergae The Crocodile Hunter's death is getting. It's been on some channel for two days now-analysis, recreations, celebrations, pontifications. What the hell?

It further reminds me how much our media outlets pander and how lacking they are at reporting the news. Subsequently, we are an ignorant society, unaware of what WE are doing in this world and too easily amused and engaged by non-stories while real life and death news is taking place.

I want each of you to read this article from AP and think hard about what deaths our news outlets should be covering and what news we should demanding to hear.

By Rawya Rageh, Associated Press Writer | August 31, 2006

BAGHDAD, Iraq --Preliminary Health Ministry figures released Thursday show violent deaths in Iraq dropped substantially in August from record levels the previous month, despite a surge of killings in Baghdad in the past week.

At least 973 violent deaths were recorded throughout Iraq in August as of Wednesday, Dr. Riad Abdul Amir of the Health Ministry's statistics bureau told The Associated Press. They included 715 civilians, 80 Iraqi soldiers, 74 police and 104 "terrorists," he said.

The term "terrorists" likely include both Sunni and Shiite militants.

That represents a significant drop from the Health Ministry's July figure of 3,500 deaths, reported by Deputy Health Minister Adel Muhsin. He said that was the highest monthly figure recorded since the war began in March 2003.

According to an AP count, at least 966 Iraqis were killed in war-related violence in August and 1,015 were killed in July. These numbers include civilians, government officials, and police and security forces, and are considered a minimum based on AP reporting. They do not include insurgents.

The AP tally is compiled from hospital, police and military officials cited in news stories, as well as accounts from reporters and photographers at the scenes.

The Health Ministry's August figures included reports received from morgues and the interior and defense ministries.

According to Muhsin, about 1,500 of the July deaths occurred in Baghdad. Violent deaths in the capital fell to 550 in August, officials said Thursday. That was the lowest monthly tally in Baghdad this year.

U.S. officials attribute the drop in violent deaths to a major security crackdown launched Aug. 7. About 8,000 U.S. troops and 3,000 Iraqi soldiers were sent to the capital to search homes systematically and patrol the streets.

On Monday, U.S. military spokesman Maj. Gen. William B. Caldwell said the murder rate in Baghdad had fallen by 46 percent from July to August and "we are actually seeing progress out there."

The decline in Iraqi deaths has not been matched by a drop in American casualties. At least 62 U.S. service members died in Iraq in August, compared with 43 in July.

Ministry officials stressed the August figures were preliminary and a final count for the month would not be ready until next week. Nevertheless, officials said they were convinced deaths were down sharply.

"In June and July we were getting scary numbers," said Hakim al-Zamly, a Health Ministry executive director.

He said it was too early to determine whether the drop was a breakthrough but "there's definitely a slight, relative improvement."

Both U.S. and Iraqi officials have been anxious to talk up signs of improvement in the capital after weeks of ever-mounting death tolls and fears of all-out sectarian civil war. On Aug. 21, the Defense Ministry said "terrorist operations" had declined in Baghdad by 70 percent.

Some U.S. officials, however, have cautioned it is too early to tell if the decline in deaths is part of a long-term trend.

A surge of violence has killed more than 250 people in the Baghdad area since Sunday, raising questions about whether U.S. and Iraqi forces have indeed turned the corner.

However, National Security Adviser Mouwafak al-Rubaie insisted Thursday that execution-style killings and sectarian violence have dropped by 45 percent in Baghdad in the last six weeks. He said that was mainly due to Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's national reconciliation plan and the Baghdad security operation.

"There's definitely a much better sense of security among the general public," al-Rubaie said.

Accurate figures on the number of people who have died in the Iraq conflict have long been the subject of debate. Police and hospitals often give widely conflicting figures of those killed in major bombings.

In addition, death figures are reported through multiple channels by government agencies that function with varying efficiency.

The Health Ministry count is based on reports from hospital morgues throughout the country and mostly includes civilians. The Interior Ministry receives its figures from police stations across the country and can include both police and civilians. The Defense Ministry reports the number of soldiers and insurgents killed.

Although officials at the national level attempt to reconcile the figures, there is a possibility of double-counting.

Furthermore, accurate data is difficult to obtain from insurgent-infested areas such as Anbar province, which includes about 20 percent of Iraq's land area and where government institutions barely function.

Militias and other armed groups are often reluctant to bring their dead and wounded to hospitals for fear of arrest, and those deaths may never show up in any government agency counts.

It is also unclear how many people may have been abducted by insurgents or sectarian death squads, then slain and their bodies never found.

According to an AP count, at least 11,916 Iraqis have been killed in war-related violence since the first elected Iraqi government after the fall of Saddam Hussein took office on April 28, 2005.

Iraq Body Count, a private group that bases its figures in part on reports by 40 media outlets, puts the number of civilian deaths since the conflict began at between 41,041 and 45,613.

The Brookings Institution Iraq Index, maintained by Michael O'Hanlon, put the count between 20,000 and 37,200 as of July 5, 2006.

President Bush, in answering questions following a speech in December, estimated "30,000, more or less, have died as a result of the initial incursion and the ongoing violence against Iraqis."





In a word...Crikey!

1 comment:

Nick said...

Yea its kinda like when Lance Bass being gay was national new same concept. Why dont we hear what we should be hearing on the new or seeing on TV what should be shown it needs to stop. Our world has become very material and half the time we are so worried about what the stars in our movies are doing it overlaps what should really be shown.