Casualties of the Iraq War.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Casualties_of_the_Iraq_War
The table below summarizes the Iraq War casualty surveys. See the rest of the above article for more detailed info.
______________________________
| Survey | Iraqi deaths | March 2003 to... |
|---|---|---|
| 151,000 violent deaths out of 400,000 excess deaths due to the war. | June 2006 | |
| Lancet survey | 601,027 violent deaths out of 654,965 excess deaths. | June 2006 |
| Opinion Research Business survey | 1,033,000 violent deaths as a result of the conflict. | August 2007 |
Google News search:
http://news.google.com/news?q=iraq+casualties
![]() Media Channel | NPR Underreports Iraq Deaths
Media Channel, NY - Mar 27, 2008 Is the 47668 figure from Iraq Body Count–a group that tabulates accounts of civilian Iraqi deaths that appear in Western news sources–the source for NPR's ... |
![]() Think Progress | Snap Judgement: In Iraq, five the hard way Jerusalem Post, Israel - 14 hours ago Practically none of the initial supporters of the Iraq war, nor even many of its opponents, predicted that US casualties would ever run that high, ... How Many More Must Die? A Sixth Year of Iraq War Bay Area Indymedia War casualties keep climbing Albany Times Union Editorial: Surge's progress can't halt Iraq turmoil Dallas Morning News Trinidad & Tobago Express - Salt Lake Tribune all 120 news articles » |
See also:
FAIR. Fairness & Accuracy In Reporting:
http://www.fair.org/index.php?page=3326
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NPR Underreports Iraq Deaths.
Media Channel, NY - Mar 27, 2008.
http://www.mediachannel.org/wordpress/2008/03/27/npr-underreports-iraq-deaths
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There is no more important question about the Iraq War than the question of how many Iraqis have died. It is impossible to truly evaluate the war or discuss where to go from here without knowing the human cost of the war, and that cost has overwhelmingly been borne by Iraqis. That's why it's so disappointing that NPR, looking back on the 5th anniversary of the war, treated this issue with either extreme sloppiness or deliberate dishonesty. Here's how NPR anchor Scott Simon introduced a segment on March 15 in which senators James Webb and Jon Kyl talked about "what the war has meant and what the future might hold": "This coming Wednesday marks the fifth
anniversary of the start of the war in Iraq. So far 3,975 U.S. service
men and women have died. Estimates on the number of Iraqis killed range
from 47,000 to 151,000, depending on the source."
But what sources are those? The New England Journal of Medicine (1/31/08) published a survey conducted by the Iraqi government on behalf of the World Health Organization, which estimated that 151,000 Iraqis had been killed by violence between the March 2003 invasion and June 2006. This, presumably, is the source of NPR's 151,000 figure. The write-up in NEJM begins: "Estimates of the death toll in Iraq from the time of the U.S.-led invasion in March 2003 until June 2006 have ranged from 47,668 (from the Iraq Body Count) to 601,027 (from a national survey)." Is the 47,668 figure from Iraq Body Count–a group that tabulates accounts of civilian Iraqi deaths that appear in Western news sources–the source for NPR's 47,000 number? There does not seem to be another major survey of Iraqi deaths that provides that estimate. Yet this is clearly described as a figure from June 2006–before the biggest peak of violence in late 2006-early 2007. Iraq Body Count currently reports that there have been at least 82,249 reported civilian deaths in Iraq; why didn't NPR use this number instead? And if NPR is taking its lower estimate of Iraqi fatalities from the NEJM report, why does it ignore the higher estimate given in that same report of 601,000? That's the estimate made by the Johns Hopkins University school of public health, and published by the Lancet medical journal (10/11/06). It's a well-known study done by highly regarded scholars; indeed, when the 151,000 figure came out, NPR's All Things Considered (1/10/08) turned for comment to Les Roberts, co-author of the Johns Hopkins study, which NPR referred to then as "a survey that continues to be debated in the press and political circles." Between January and March, though, that much-debated study somehow vanished from NPR's collective memory. It's worth noting that 601,000 figure from Johns Hopkins study and the 151,000 number from WHO both only go up to June 2006, and therefore also leave out the worst of the violence. The most recent survey of Iraqi deaths is the poll conducted by Opinion Research Business, a top British polling firm, in August 2007, which found an estimated 1.2 million deaths by violence among Iraqi households. If NPR really wanted to inform its listeners about the range of credible estimates of Iraqi deaths, it would have included this survey–but instead left them with the impression that the highest plausible estimate was one-eighth as high. Other outlets also downplayed the likely number of Iraqi dead; Jim Lehrer of PBS's NewsHour (3/19/08) reported that the number was "at least 90,000," without mentioning serious estimates almost 14 times higher. Others were more forthright, as with NBC's Richard Engel (NBC Nightly News, 3/19/08): "The number of civilian casualties is unclear. Estimates range from 85,000 to 600,000." But few outlets misled their audiences about what the highest credible estimates were the way NPR did. ACTION: Please ask NPR's ombud to investigate how NPR determined the lowest and highest estimates for Iraqis killed in the Iraq War. CONTACT: Email form on NPR's website: –by FAIR Popularity: 1% [?]
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3 Responses to "NPR Underreports Iraq Deaths"Posted on 27 Mar 2008 at 4:10 pm by Jackie
Just another policital ploy to keep the numbers down. They know how appalled we are with the large number of deaths (now at 4,000) of our American soldiers, so to even hint at this huge number of Iraqi deaths would be outrageous. If that many Iraqis have been killed in this senseless war, just imagine how many must have been seriously injured. It is sad when you cannot depend on NPR to give correct information. Are all the media outlets being silenced these days? Why are we donating to NPR if they are reporting partisan news? - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Posted on 27 Mar 2008 at 5:23 pm by Cord;ey Coit
Scott
Simon and the NPR crew appear to bury the dead and are playing a number
game with the bodies. As Home Simpson says "It's bad luck to play with
the dead." - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Posted on 27 Mar 2008 at 7:44 pm by Steven Jackson
I'm not surprised that NPR has under reported the number of Iraqi casualties in the war. That's been their approach all along. On the eve of the war, as I and upwards of 700,000 U.S. citizens attempted to voice our opposition to the war on the street in front of the United Nations building in New York, I thought surely the most "liberal" major news service in the country would have at least mentioned that something was happening. After all, little gray haired ladies being trampled on in the street by the NYPD mounted police would seem to be the kind of activity that people would want to know about. But when I returned home to Vermont I heard nary a word about it on ANY major radio or TV broadcast until the following Tuesday when Terry Gross featured the event on her show Fresh Air. To be fair, there was mention of public demonstrations in France, England, Spain, and Italy. but when it came to reporting the opposition here in the U.S., it was all but ignored till way after the fact. (suppressed?) While there are a number of excellent programs out of NPR, when it comes to this war, they have been negligent in their reporting. As a result, I no longer donate to NPR. They knew better. Shame on them. The good thing is that as a result of my realization that we had a serious problem with media and the press in this country I decided to get more involved in media production myself. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Leave a Reply |
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