Are you sure?
This bookmark will be removed from all folders and any saved notes will be permanently removed.
A ring of care for Mosul’s civilians
Adapted from an article published in The Christian Science Monitor, March 30, 2017.
The battle to retake the Iraqi city of Mosul from Islamic State, which began this past fall, has now become the most intense urban warfare since World War II. Street-to-street fighting in Mosul’s western and older section has put Iraqi forces to the test against ISIS fighters, who took Iraq’s second-largest city in 2014.
Yet unlike any previous urban combat in the history of war, the battle for Mosul includes an unusual protection for civilians. Humanitarian workers have set up a chain of lifesaving care facilities for the wounded, from the front lines to field clinics only ten minutes away. As tens of thousands have fled the fighting, they are quickly being given necessary physical care, and later any rehabilitative or mental treatment.
This chain of care around Mosul represents a renewed interest by the United Nations and other international bodies to implement two core ideas of humanitarian law—that the violence of war must have its limits and innocent life must be protected. ISIS may not abide by the Geneva Conventions, but Iraq and its foreign partners are determined to embrace the global norm that calls for the prevention of unnecessary suffering in war.
Much of the attention in the battle for Mosul has focused on civilian casualties, most of which are intentional acts of barbarity by ISIS. The group “ruthlessly exploits civilians to serve its own ends, and clearly has not even the faintest qualm about deliberately placing them in danger,” says UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Ra’ad al-Hussein. Yet ISIS’s disregard for civilians is up against the rest of the world’s loving concern for Mosul’s besieged residents. This is reflected in the pre-battle spending to position care facilities near the city. Many of the facilities are run by the World Health Organization, the International Committee of the Red Cross, and Doctors Without Borders. The Iraqi government has also contributed.
This unprecedented application of humanitarian law in urban warfare needs to be copied in other ongoing battles in the Middle East, such as in Yemen and Syria. Embedded in this practice is the universal idea that each individual has a right to health regardless of ideology or creed. The more the world embraces that idea and cares for the innocent in war, perhaps wars will become less violent. The bonds of humanity can be a strong defense against the claims of physical power.
Adapted from an article published in The Christian Science Monitor, March 30, 2017.
May 8, 2017 issue
View Issue-
From the readers
Charlotte Bushnell, Meg Cowan
-
The Christ is speaking
Eric D. Pagett
-
Raising children and turning to God as Mother
Blythe Evans
-
Stick to the perfect model
Martin Vesely
-
Powerful evidence of Mind’s presence
Fenella Bennetts
-
A sweet treat—in honor of Mother’s Day
Heather Bauer
-
National Fund for Christian Science Nursing
from the Christian Science nursing activities department at The Mother Church
-
No more period pain
Avantika Dey
-
Healed of several ailments
Donna Black
-
‘With lovingkindness have I drawn thee’
Joanne Battista
-
Quick healing of illness
Kelly Kioko Wambua with contributions from Francisca Nduku
-
'Hath not thy heart within thee burned ...'
Photograph by Sharon Alwart
-
A ring of care for Mosul’s civilians
The <i>Monitor’s</i> Editorial Board
-
Praying for those in Mosul
David C. Kennedy
-
Speaking of Truth as power
Kim Crooks Korinek