banatyne takes on
big tobacco
iraq's lost
generation
afghanistan:
lifting the veil
undercover mother
afghanistan unveiled
charles: the
meddling prince
undercover mosque
monkeys, rats and
me: animal testing
burma's secret war
britain's rubbish
undercover in
the secret state
gypsy wars
re-opening
the post
undercover with
new labour
my friend
the mercenary
touts on tour
profiting from
kids in care
third class post
the best for
my child
islam unveiled
iran undercover
the child sex trade
blood and revenge
truth and lies
in baghdad
lifting the veil:
zarmina's story
secrets of the
saudi state
down the tube
unholy war
beneath the veil
looking for ricky
party crashers
bloody foreigners
children of the
secret state
prime suspects &
witness to murder

Iraq's Lost
Generation

In the past five years more than four million Iraqis - 20 per cent of the entire population - have been driven from their homes as a result of the war and sectarian bloodshed. Two million have become exiles, living desperate lives across the border in Syria and Jordan. This edition of Dispatches investigates the biggest and most catastrophic refugee crisis in the Middle East since the Palestinian diaspora of 1948.

Iraq's Lost Generation is the first film in the Happy Birthday Iraq season marking the fifth anniversary of the invasion - a series of penetrating programmes examining the devastating fall-out of the war for Iraq and the Middle East, America and Britain.

Award-winning journalist Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy travels to Syria and Jordan to investigate the plight of Iraqi refugees. These are the very people on whom the new, democratic Iraq was to be built - the professional middle classes - nearly half of whom now live as desperate refugees, driven out by the violence and civil breakdown.

Sharmeen meets former translators who worked for British and American troops and as a result have had to flee for their lives. Trapped in a foreign country, their glowing army recommendations appear apparently worthless as the countries they risked their lives to support have now turned their backs on them. The wife of a building contractor who worked for the US now says she misses Saddam - her teenage children want to return to Baghdad to fight the Americans.

 

 

 

 
 

Iraq's Lost Generation
A Dispatches Investigation for Channel 4
First Broadcast: Sunday 16 March 2008 07:00 PM

In Amman, Sharmeen visits some of the worst-injured Iraqi children - burnt, mutilated and horrifically disfigured - these are some of the youngest victims of both the war and sectarian violence. They are members of a special medical aid programme which offers help to a tiny proportion of the children needing treatment. The thought of returning to Iraq terrifies 12-year-old Ahed, whose leg has been shredded to the bone by a roadside bomb, an injury so awful that he cannot bring himself to look at it. Hanan, also 12 years-old, lost her six siblings and parents in a suicide-bomb attack outside her mosque - the blast left her with terrible burns. Sharmeen waits with her in hospital as she prepares for her 13th operation.

In Syria, Sharmeen investigates the flourishing sex trade - in Damascus underage Iraqi girls dance and can be purchased for sexual favours.

Every refugee Sharmeen meets has an anguished tale to tell - from the mobile-phone shop owner who was gunned down and left paralysed by religious fanatics to the Christian family whose life of middle class comfort has been exchanged for the misery of refugee subsistence in sub-zero temperatures. And there's the former Shia policeman who was tortured by sectarian militia, and whose marriage to his Kurdish wife forced the entire family to evacuate.

Health, education, and housing resources in Jordan and Syria are stretched to breaking point by this massive influx of refugees.

We are told that Iraq is getting safer, but no-one Sharmeen meets on her journey wants to go back. And they face a bleak future with less than a one per cent chance of being resettled in a Western country. Last year, just four refugees from Syria were granted asylum in Britain.

Help Amman:

You can make a donation to MSF's Amman surgery appeal at www.uk2.msf.org/amman.htm

 
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