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Ирак - итоги года Число сирот и вдов достигло 8 млн. (это треть населения!), беженцев - 4 млн. Another 22,586–24,159 civilian deaths have been recorded in 2007 through Iraq Body Count’s extensive monitoring of media and official reports. These figures, though undoubtedly incomplete, are the most comprehensive and well-established currently available, and show beyond any doubt that civil security in Iraq remains in a parlous state. Figures for the most recent months indicate that violence in Iraq has returned to the monthly levels IBC was recording in 2005, a year which was itself (until 2006) the worst since the invasion. 1 1Iraq death toll in third year of occupation is highest yet IBC Press release, 9 Mar 2006.
The graphs below show the 2006 and 2007 totals month by month, first for all of Iraq, then for Baghdad, and then for the rest of the country. (Totals for December 2007 are currently preliminary.) Baghdad Outside Baghdad With two exceptions (May and July), the 2007 civilian death toll in Baghdad has fallen steadily month on month. By December 2007 this had fallen to around 246, about one-seventh of the starting January total of 1,683. 2 2 In tracking trends, whenever there is a range in the IBC numbers the higher figure is used. Many of the figures and all of the graphs on this page are dynamic and will update as new data are analysed and added. Data now being displayed was last updated on 1 Jan 2008. In contrast, the monthly toll outside Baghdad increased substantially between January (1,112) and August (1,604), before a steep drop to around 700 per month and below for September through December. Collating these two different trends yields a picture for the entire country where the civilian death rates stayed consistently high (at around 2,500 per month) for the first eight months, changing fairly suddenly to around 1,000 per month over the last four months to the end of the year 2007. (The trend line is complicated by a single massive event in August, 2007, IBC entry k7225, which alone accounted for more than 500 of the deaths in that month.) While violence in Baghdad apparently continues its decline, areas elsewhere exhibit less positive signs, and have shown sharp rises in some of the places where violence is most concentrated (for more on this see the following section). 3 Computed per-capita death rates are sensitive to several factors, including the accuracy of existing population estimates. The data used here (ILCS 2004, p.16 [PDF]), has become outdated by mass refugee movement in the intervening years. The IBC-computed, civilian-only rates for these regions are therefore uncertain, but likely conservative, since refugee outflows will most affect these high violence areas. 4 Deaths recorded in Anbar during 2007 included numerous finds of bodies which may have been buried many months earlier. 5 Large bombings claim ever more lives IBC 4 Oct 2007. Perhaps the most accurate description of the security situation for Iraqi civilians in the past year is that it was less bad than if the worst of the late 2006 levels had been sustained throughout 2007. To herald ‘security improvements’ in 2007 is to overlook not only that security remains at an abysmally low level, but that for some 24,000 Iraqi civilians, and their families and friends, the year was one of devastating and irreparable tragedy. 6 The Baghdad 'surge' and civilian casualties IBC Sep 2007. One hopeful sign that does distinguish the most recent six-month period from earlier post-invasion periods is that civilian deaths per month continue to trend downwards, particularly in Baghdad. If some of this reduction in violence has been obtained through the US-led security initiative,6 then this has also been at the price of an increase, compared to 2006, in the number of non-combatants killed directly and solely by US fire, most often from the air. Given that Iraq’s continuing paroxysm of violence began with a massive exercise of US firepower, the sooner the US regime learns to employ means other than violence to solve the problem of violence in Iraq, the sooner there will be genuine cause for optimism. The IBC totals derive from all reputable sources that allow the ascription of deaths or of bodies being found to, at the very least, a particular time or place, and enables these deaths to be distinguished from others (for more about our sources see our Methods, section 2). On 31st December 2007 figures from Iraq’s Ministries of Interior, Health, and Defence were published, claiming 16,232 civilian deaths and 1,300 police deaths in 2007. Despite their lack of detail, these figures are considerably lower than the IBC totals for the comparable period (as they have been in earlier years). Unfortunately, in the absence of the release of incident-by-incident data by the Ministries concerned, or details on the methods used for compiling these figures, there is no easy way of identifying the source of the difference between ministry and IBC totals. The same difficulty adheres to figures provided from time to time by the US Department of Defense. What can be said is that each IBC figure is supported by public-domain information at the greatest level of detail available. Therefore the onus is on those who have provided lower aggregate official figures to explain to the world at large which of the specific IBC-recorded incidents are not included in their 2007 civilian death toll and why.
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