Arab newspapers discussed the fire of Ibn Al -Khatib Hospital in Baghdad, which killed more than 80 people and 110 injured.
Iraqi writers believe that the incident was caused by the collapse of the health sector and the absence of the state's role in reforming and rehabilitating it.
Most of the book blames the ruling political class in Iraq for what they describe as rampant corruption in all sectors of the state, including the health sector.
Another book doubts the governmental measures that followed the fire, and they see that there is no use in reform in light of the continuation of the same political class in government.
"The absence of the state and the collapse of the health sector"
The London "Al -Quds Al -Arabi" says that the incident "is a new incident in a long record of tragedies that have been hitting the country and continuing for decades, in light of the absence of the state and the preoccupation of ministries, institutions, politicians and parties with partisan, ideological, sectarian or regional conflicts, as well as the prevalence of corruption, chaos, neglect, lack of sense of responsibility".
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The newspaper also notes in its editorial that the accident "is also a natural fate of the gradual collapse that affected the infrastructure in the health sectors due to decades of the siege imposed on Iraq and on the side of preventing the import of health equipment and supplies specifically."
Haifa Zangana says in the same newspaper: "Corruption is rooted in the construction contracts for fake, incomplete, or incomplete hospitals, and the purchase contracts, equipment, and medicine, and medical supplies, and the lack of maintenance and qualification of hospitals."
She believes that "the killing of the injured in Al -Khatib Hospital will increase the depth of the gap between citizens and the politicians of the government -based government, and reduces the possibility of any reform claimed by those involved in this government and militia parties."
From her point of view, "real reform requires the availability of political will and popular support, which will not be achieved within the system of rampant corruption or the vulgar government declaration of the formation of an investigation committee to know the causes of the fire, as if they do not know that they are the cause."
"What happened in Ibn Al -Khatib Hospital, too, reflects the state of corruption that health institutions have reached."
He believes that the incident "requires the presentation of those who neglect to the trial, led by the Minister of Health."
"Corruption" of the political class
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Ihsan Kazem, in the Iraqi "Al -Akhbar", is criticizing the symbols and parties of the ruling political class, as he says: "The incident is added to their record of setbacks ... and the seizure of citizens’ property and loyalty to the foreigner, stealing public money and wasting the country's wealth. "
He adds: "Were it not for the disruption of building new hospitals according to contemporary specifications, neglecting the development of old hospitals, not providing a health service worthy of a wealthy state citizen like Iraq, and the installation of their followers without experience and efficiency, and making the Ministry of Health a dairy cow to make money and transfer construction tenders and import medical devices and medicinesAnd other equipment to sources for their benefit, when we witnessed such a heinous incident. "
"Corruption has been developed in all the joints of the state because of the response of many corrupt parties to the rule of the country during the past eighteen years."
He believes that "the Iraqi citizen must think in all honesty and seriousness to change a lot of corrupt political faces that govern the country out of political quota."
The writer criticizes Iraqi politicians that they are "all involved in the shine of the remainder of this perfect body, so that the Iraqi remains steeped in the stat of concerns that cannot end before it ends his relationship with this corrupt ruling class."
"Disasters continue and the angry protests continue, and there is no way to find real solutions for them because the game is continuing and the players are getting more fierce and intending to kill and their consciences are increasing in a coma."
"The volume of corruption in this country has reached unprecedented levels, which is equivalent to the failure of the dependency of parties, entities, and even political figures, for this or that country," said Iyad Al -Dulaimi in the London -Arab Al -Jadeed.
He believes that "the catastrophe of the Ibn Al -Khatib Hospital in Baghdad last Saturday night is another evidence that corruption was shivered in the Iraqi body, until it referred it to a trace of an eye."
"The project of confronting corruption requires a courageous revolutionary leadership and a major national campaign, far from the deals of those involved in the most harmful corruption episodes of the country, after corruption numbers have become legendary."
The writer notes that "the advertisements of Iraqi Prime Minister Mustafa Al -Kazemi about his campaign against corruption and the arrest of some officials are impressive to those who live under the roof of the political process and its supporters."
He says: "We do not blame Al -Kazemi in his policy, which appears to be improved by his predecessor, Adel Abdul -Mahdi," but he asks: "Can Al -Kazemi open the various corruption files, including health, and can he deal with the continuous corruption operations, reveal and stop it?"
Doubts about government procedures
Muhammad Khudair says in the Iraqi time that the government "first needs to review its speech in the management of (the crisis), that is, a crisis ... as it needs - secondly - to open the file of the Ministry of Health."
It also calls for "a comprehensive review of everything that happened a year ago, whether in the health, economic or political field."
But Al -Quds Al -Arabi questions the feasibility of government decisions, "If the defect is structural, deep and comprehensive, it will be rooted day after day and the body of the state is in succession and constraint."
In its editorial, she says: "The official procedures about stopping this or that official, or forming an investigation committees in the disaster and release promises about revealing the results and holding the officials accountable, will not help in ensuring that similar disasters are not repeated, their consequences may also be more severe."
Saad Jawad also questions the London "opinion" of the feasibility of governmental procedures, as "all the investigative committees that were formed, and in all cases, did not come out with a result."
He adds: "Nobody knows how this tragic situation will end, nor how Iraq will recover after corruption, killing and daily neglect become phenomena rooted in society. There is no evidence on the horizon of a close salvation for the Iraqis of these tragedies."
He believes that "all parties and blocs in the political process are shared in this corruption and crimes."
But he stresses that "the situation cannot remain as it is, and Iraq cannot be sterile than having reformers and leaders who bring things back to their quorum, despite the difficulty of the task."