‘Inhuman
sanctions’ by US fail to achieve political goals, as people suffer
“I urge my counterparts to seize the opportunity presented by Iran’s recent election. I urge them to make the most of the mandate for prudent engagement that my people have given me and to respond genuinely to my government’s efforts to engage in constructive dialogue. Most of all, I urge them to look beyond the pines and be brave enough to tell me what they see — if not for their national interests, then for the sake of their legacies, and our children and future generations,” he wrote in an opinion essay published in The Washington Post on September 20.
According to the British Medical Journal, as many as a million people died from malnutrition-related causes in North Korea in the 1990s, and the situation hasn’t improved much since then. The reclusive nation’s economy is struggling to survive, and its agriculture has suffered major blows from natural disasters.
23
September, 2013
Washington
seems certain that exerting sanctions on countries is the safest way
to achieve their foreign policy goals. In reality economic and
political sanctions do little to control the governments they target,
hitting ordinary citizens hard instead.
“The
aim of sanctions is to harm the state. But the real victims are
ordinary, regular people. Experience has shown that there’s a huge
wedge between what ordinary people experience under sanctions, and
what the elite do,”
RT’s Middle East correspondent Paula Slier reported.
One
country against which the US has introduced a wide range of sanctions
is Iran. While there’s no concrete proof that Tehran has been busy
developing nuclear weapons (it insists its atomic program is for
peaceful purposes only), due to international sanctions, the country
is struggling to source necessary medicine to treat cancer patients.
Meanwhile,
cancer is the third cause of premature death in Iran, with 30,000
people a year now dying from the disease, according to
www.ncr-iran.org.
Furthermore, a number of these people can ill afford increasingly
expensive treatment.
Widespread
pollution, excessive use of chemical fertilizers containing cadmium
and nitrate, as well as the high psychological pressure of life, have
been blamed for the soaring cancer statistics.
“It
is my second chemotherapy program. Previously, each session cost
approximately 300 dollars. These days it costs about 700 dollars,”
pensioner Mahammad Rhidai, who is a cancer patient, told RT. “It
is also a challenge to get the medication, because you have to go to
almost every drugstore asking for them and also because the prices
are way too high.”
Doctors are also sounding the alarm: the trade embargo has caused shortages of food and medical supplies. The director of a cancer center in Iran says he has faced lots of problems getting modern equipment to treat cancer patients.
Doctors are also sounding the alarm: the trade embargo has caused shortages of food and medical supplies. The director of a cancer center in Iran says he has faced lots of problems getting modern equipment to treat cancer patients.
“There
are numerous obstacles for importing the equipment due to the
sanctions in place against Iran. We have some equipment but it
requires spare parts that we can’t get anywhere. A failure of any
single piece or part of this equipment causes us to stop operating
the entire machine,”
Dr. Kaziminyan said.
Iran
is looking to reach out to the world’s powers to revive nuclear
talks, in a bid to resolve the global standoff that has dragged on
for years.
Ahead
of his upcoming address to the UN General Assembly, the country's new
leader Hassan Rouhani pledged not to develop nuclear weapons,
demanding the West make concessions and ease the painful sanctions.
“I urge my counterparts to seize the opportunity presented by Iran’s recent election. I urge them to make the most of the mandate for prudent engagement that my people have given me and to respond genuinely to my government’s efforts to engage in constructive dialogue. Most of all, I urge them to look beyond the pines and be brave enough to tell me what they see — if not for their national interests, then for the sake of their legacies, and our children and future generations,” he wrote in an opinion essay published in The Washington Post on September 20.
In
August, the president of Iran’s Academy of Medical Sciences slammed
Washington for exacting “sadistic” revenge on Iranian children
through their “inhuman
sanctions”
against the nation.
“The
applied sanctions have caused and will continue to cause acute
shortages of necessary food and medicine,”
Dr. Alireza Marandi wrote in a letter to UN Secretary General Ban
Ki-Moon.
“The
sanctions are also making these essential items increasingly more
expensive. As a result, these indispensable supplies have become
inaccessible to the most vulnerable of society, including children,
mothers, and the elderly, as well as disease-specific and cancer
patients. This has literally stopped many patients from being able to
prepare or collect essential medications required for their
treatment; we are, therefore, witnessing more and more cases of
gradual malnutrition and death of children and of patients with
specific diseases,”
he explained.
Dr.
Marandi noted that for over three decades, Iran implemented
successful healthcare plans and programs, backed by the World Health
Organization, which had “significantly
improved the overall health of the entire nation”.
“These
achievements are now seriously threatened by the escalation of
barbaric sanctions in the past few weeks, particularly by the US
government,”
he added.
Meanwhile,
an expert in global financial markets, Patrick Young argues that in
the modern world we live in, any sanctions, even the strictest ones,
eventually prove useless.
“The
issue with sanctions is that ultimately in an inter-connected world
where we have so much globalization, it’s almost impossible for any
country even for the hyper-power of the United States of America to
be able to successfully stop trade and transaction to successfully
happen with different countries. Therefore the end result ultimately
has only been to impoverish ordinary citizens rather than really
hitting the elite, or ultimately actually endangering the hold-on
power of the same elite,”
Young told RT.
He
notes that the situation with sanctions being applied to any country
by the US is that the country in question seems to have lost in the
court of American public opinion.
“Therefore
we see endlessly sanctions being applied to those nations that are
seen as being pariahs, whether that’s being manipulated by
political figures or not, and ultimately it causes a problem for the
American media who have been overall regarding the idea that this
country is in some way a threat to either children or its citizens,
or overall is precluding freedom and democracy in that nation,”
Mr Young added.
For
instance, North Korea’s nuclear aspirations make the US feel
uneasy, so the country has been slapped with trade and military
restrictions. Although international relief organizations decried the
sanctions as inhumane, restrictions still stay in place. Pyongyang
has showed no sign of abandoning its nuclear program.
North
Koreans are seen from the window of a train along the railway line
between Pyongyang and the North Phyongan Province on the west coast
(AFP Photo / Pedro Ugarte)
According to the British Medical Journal, as many as a million people died from malnutrition-related causes in North Korea in the 1990s, and the situation hasn’t improved much since then. The reclusive nation’s economy is struggling to survive, and its agriculture has suffered major blows from natural disasters.
Syria,
too, has fallen foul of the United States. Trade and economic
restrictions on this middle-eastern country are adding to the burden
on an economy, already ravaged by a civil war that has lasted for
over two years. More than 100,000 people have been killed in the
conflict, according to UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon.
“Every
day people there have to face not just the danger of being killed by
a stray bullet, but also the fear that they won’t be able to put
bread on the table: access to staple foods has been curtailed by the
trade restrictions, prices have sky-rocketed, and life has turned
into a struggle for survival,”
RT’s Irina Galushko added.
Cuba
is another country against which Washington has implemented its
sanctions. No nukes here, just a six-decade association with
communism and as a result, no trade with the US. Many say the
country’s economy is floundering.
The
embargo costs Cuba roughly $690 million a year. But the losses for
the US are between $1.2 and $3.6 billion annually.
But
again, those affected are the most vulnerable in society,
particularly Cuba’s elderly, as the country has a rationing system
that gives preferential treatment to women and children.
“Those
who have been hit hardest seem to be men and the elderly,”
RT’s correspondent says.
A
customer gets his monthly rice quota in a store where people can use
their "libreta", a ration card which since 1963 has allowed
Cubans to buy basic food supplies at cheap -- and heavily subsidized
-- prices, in Havana (AFP Photo)
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