home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- AFRICA, Page 32A Day in the Death of Somalia
-
-
-
- By ANDREW PURVIS/BARDERA
-
-
- Dawn. As the red sun edges over the horizon, a crowd of
- frail bodies gathers in the chill morning air outside the UNICEF
- feeding center in Bardera, a small town in southern Somalia.
- Each person clutches an aluminum pot or gourd to be filled, they
- hope, with a meal of brown gruel before the day is over. For
- four weeks now they have been been arriving at the rate of 150
- to 200 a day from villages as far as 125 miles away, camping
- overnight in abandoned huts and making their way to the center
- in the predawn hours through the wide, dusty streets.
-
- Most of those waiting are women and children; their men
- were killed in the endless fighting that has cursed the region,
- or they simply absconded. Edaba Dhaqane, 20, arrived during the
- night with her five-year-old daughter after a 12-mile trek from
- her home village upstream along the Juba River. The big-boned
- woman with wide, staring eyes has not seen her husband in two
- months -- "He has another wife," she explains -- and two
- younger children have died of hunger. Her daughter, naked except
- for a string of turquoise beads, coughs at her side. Dhaqane
- snatches the girl to her bony chest. "I will stay here," she
- says, "until the food runs out."
-
- 5:45 a.m. The throng, which has been growing steadily,
- surges ahead. The red iron gates have eased open a crack, enough
- to let through a single file of supplicants. Inside, 12 Somali
- guards dressed in battle fatigues and armed with M-16 rifles
- issue orders. Wielding 3-ft. wooden switches, they herd the
- people into neat rows at the rear of a large earthen courtyard.
- In 30 minutes more than 2,000 people are seated on the ground
- while others stream in: nomad women wrapped in black shawls,
- grandmothers in tattered sackcloth, lone children naked but for
- a makeshift shirt. At one point the crowd seethes forward.
- Guards, screaming, strike the women on their bare backs.
- Discipline, of a sort, is restored.
-
- 8:15 a.m. A Somali nurse dressed in white coat and rubber
- sandals picks his way through the crowd to weed out the
- youngest, most desperate cases. Gathering them together in
- another part of the compound, he feeds each one a spoonful of
- antidiarrhea medicine from a rusty thermos bottle. Every child
- under five receives a plastic bracelet, which entitles the
- wearer to a protein biscuit in addition to a bowl of gruel. The
- bands are color coded; blue for severely malnourished; red for
- those on the verge of death.
-
- 8:45 a.m. The feeding begins. Guards select about 20
- people from the front rows and steer them toward the food vats,
- six huge oil barrels cut in half and fitted with wire handles.
- Working quickly, Somali servers ladle out two large cupfuls of
- steaming Unimix, a brownish mixture of maize, beans and
- vegetable oil, for each person. Suddenly, an elderly woman
- rushes forward, inadvertently knocking the steaming ration from
- a small girl's wizened hands. The child howls in pain and anger:
- the gruel is scalding hot (several other children display
- peeling scars from previous burns), but far worse, the day's
- only meal is gone. After filling their pots, the refugees file
- through the gate -- they are not permitted to eat in the
- compound -- and settle down in side streets or dusty clearings.
- There they wait impatiently for the food to cool, then wolf it
- down.
-
- 9:35 a.m. A boy of five with a red bracelet has passed out
- in the crowd. Two workers rush over, hoist him by his spindly
- limbs and lay him down beneath a shade tree on the far side of
- the courtyard. The boy is suffering from severe dehydration,
- and the nurse hastily inserts an intravenous tube, hooking the
- bottle to a branch. It is too late. As the boy's eyes roll back
- beneath fluttering eyelids, an older woman gently presses them
- shut. The boy came from the village of Malwuen, 34 miles away,
- where both parents and eight of his brothers and sisters
- succumbed to starvation in the past six months. Four days ago,
- he set out for Bardera with his last sibling, an elder brother,
- who now rocks quietly weeping by his side.
-
- 11:15 a.m. The equatorial sun is beating down hard now,
- and many of the 1,000 people still waiting in the exposed
- courtyard have propped aluminum pots on their heads in a vain
- attempt to shield themselves from the heat. Others have tried
- to squeeze into the pool of shade offered by a scraggly tree.
- A teary-eyed little girl, throat dry with thirst, slips by the
- guards and pleads for a jug of water. She is angrily rebuffed.
- Workers have grown accustomed to the desperate, and few have
- pity, any longer, to spare.
-
- Noon. As the gruel is doled out, cooks keep the six vats
- brewing, boiling dense brown river water to purge at least some
- of the bacteria, then stirring in the Unimix with wooden poles.
- One cook estimates that it will take 80 vats to feed everyone
- here this day. At least, he says, there is enough food. Two
- weeks before, inadequate supplies stirred the crowd into a
- frenzy. Mothers tore pots from starving children to feed their
- own. "It was terrible," recalls Dr. Ayub Sheik Yeron, the
- UNICEF representative who set up this feeding center last month.
- "When people have not eaten for three or four days, they lose
- control."
-
- 2:10 p.m. Two skeletal men, discovered semiconscious on
- the outskirts of town, are carried into the compound and laid
- side by side underneath a tree. The friends had collapsed after
- walking for three days and two nights to reach this place from
- their home village 31 miles away. A nurse slips intravenous
- tubes into barely visible veins and covers each man with a gray
- blanket. With stomachs too cramped to tolerate food, the men
- ignore the cans of gruel placed at their side. The nurse
- predicts that neither will survive to evening.
-
- 3:15 p.m. He is correct; they die quickly. A man with a
- gimpy leg, evidently the center's undertaker, expertly wraps
- these two bodies and four others -- the day's dead -- in rags
- and burlap sacks discarded from rations that came too late. He
- puts the bundles into a blue wheelbarrow, wheels them out of
- the compound and down to the banks of the Juba, where they are
- lowered together into an open grave.
-
- 4:15 p.m. Shadows begin to lengthen across the courtyard
- as one last child, a small cross-eyed boy with no parents to
- wash the red dust out of his matted hair, has his gourd filled
- and wanders distractedly out the gate. Moments later the iron
- doors swing shut.
-
- 8:00 p.m. In the still darkness outside the compound, a
- handful of women and children shelter for the night beneath a
- stunted shade tree. They will be the first in line tomorrow.
- Others have made their way back to roofless, unkempt huts,
- abandoned during the fighting here, to wait out the long hours
- until another feeding day begins. Says UNICEF's Dr. Yeron: "I
- have been in the refugee camps during the Ethiopian famine, and
- I have never seen such a catastrophe as we have in Somalia."
- Still, he says, since dry rations became available here two
- weeks ago, the situation has improved. "Last month we had 40
- people dying each day at this feeding center. Today there were
- just six." The doctor shakes his head. Comfort comes in strange
- forms in this ravaged land.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-