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- <text id=91TT1257>
- <title>
- June 10, 1991: Watching Children Starve to Death
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- June 10, 1991 Evil
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- HEALTH, Page 56
- Watching Children Starve to Death
- </hdr><body>
- <p>An exclusive look at the suffering inside Iraq's devastated
- hospitals
- </p>
- <p>By NINA BURLEIGH/BAGHDAD
- </p>
- <p> In a dingy pediatric ward at Baghdad's Qadissiya
- Hospital, Fadhia, 19, stands vigil over a crib where her
- five-month-old daughter lies dying of malnutrition. She has been
- here before: a month earlier she watched as her three-year-old
- son succumbed to starvation and diarrhea. Now she watches as her
- little daughter, her face all shriveled and her body bony, grows
- smaller every day. The hospital is crammed with such children.
- But it has no food to save them, and scant medicine.
- </p>
- <p> Even sheets and diapers are lacking, so the famished
- babies lie naked on plastic mattresses. Each day the hospital
- admits another 10 cases of marasmus--an advanced state of
- malnutrition that causes the child's face and body to become as
- shriveled and haggard as those of a wizened old man. Other
- children have grotesquely swollen bellies--a symptom of the
- starvation syndrome known as kwashiorkor. Before the war, says
- the hospital's director, there was barely one such case a year.
- </p>
- <p> While America has celebrated a swift, efficient victory in
- the Persian Gulf, a tour of hospitals inside Iraq tells the
- story of a different war. This one is still being fought,
- against epidemic disease and starvation, the conflict's sorry
- legacies. Its principal victims are children. The tour,
- sponsored by the Arab-American Medical Association for doctors
- of Iraqi extraction, afforded unprecedented access to the
- country's ravaged medical system and desperate doctors and
- patients. But even on the street, the hunger and suffering were
- palpable. "I was shocked by the look on people's faces,"
- Cleveland physician Nadia al-Kaisi told TIME, the only U.S.
- publication represented on the tour. "They are all emotionless,
- desperate faces without smiles."
- </p>
- <p> Hospital administrators and doctors, who give interviews
- in rooms invariably decorated with a portrait of Saddam Hussein
- smiling benevolently, are often reluctant to admit the extent of
- the health disaster they are witnessing. But signs of distress
- are everywhere. Many hospitals were damaged by allied bombing,
- including three in Baghdad and two in Basra. Completely
- destroyed was the only hospital in the country that performed
- kidney transplants and advanced heart surgery. In other cases,
- physical damage to medical facilities was caused by the civilian
- uprisings that followed the war.
- </p>
- <p> But most widespread problems are traceable to the allied
- devastation of power plants and to the continuing trade embargo.
- Without electricity, hospitals cannot operate even such basic
- equipment as incubators or refrigerators needed to store blood
- and medicine, much less the more sophisticated machinery of
- operating rooms and intensive-care units. In the northern city
- of Arbil, all premature infants are dying: there are no working
- incubators. In the southern city of Karbala, a hospital without
- refrigeration relies on a makeshift method to acquire blood for
- transfusions: the staff sends a young man running out of the
- hospital to fetch a person with the proper blood type, who will
- give blood as the operation progresses.
- </p>
- <p> While economic sanctions were not meant to include food
- and medicine, they have effectively done so, according to
- health professionals in Iraq. In hospitals where children lie
- dying of malnutrition, mothers hovering over cribs hold out a
- hand when they see a foreign visitor and beg, "Haleeb, haleeb,"
- (Milk, milk). Because the cash-starved government can no longer
- afford to subsidize the cost of imported baby formula and other
- staples, prices have skyrocketed. A can of Similac cost half a
- dinar ($1.50) before the war; now it costs 20 dinars.
- </p>
- <p> One day's worth of formula for Fadhia's dying
- five-month-old daughter would cost more than her husband makes
- in a week. Qadissiya Hospital ran out two months ago, and the
- mothers are unable to breast-feed because they cannot find
- enough food for themselves. Fadhia and thousands of other
- indigents who live in the Baghdad slum known as Saddam City have
- taken to foraging alongside dogs and sheep, searching for food
- in the mounting piles of garbage that line every street. There
- has been no refuse pickup in the neighborhood in five months.
- Nor is there clean water. Sewage has backed up into the streets
- in greenish, foul-smelling pools.
- </p>
- <p> Because of such conditions, the threat from dysentery,
- typhoid fever, cholera and other diseases brought on by
- consuming contaminated food and water is even greater than the
- threat of starvation. "Dysentery is the No. 1 killer in Iraq
- right now," says Arfan al-Hani, a suburban-Chicago cardiologist
- who led the Arab-American medical delegation. Hospitals across
- the country are admitting two to five times as many patients
- with gastroenteritis caused by waterborne infections as they did
- before the war. Some other infections, including salmonella and
- shigellosis, could be treated with simple antibiotics. But all
- the doctors can offer are sugar-water solutions, and so patients
- are dying.
- </p>
- <p> Children are faring the worst. According to the Iraqi Red
- Crescent, 80% of all deaths since the cease-fire have been
- youngsters. A Harvard medical team that visited Iraq in late
- April estimated that 170,000 children will die of
- gastrointestinal disease complicated by malnutrition as a result
- of the war. Allied bombing of power stations caused the
- breakdown of the water-purification system.
- </p>
- <p> Though the greatest suffering is among the poor, visiting
- doctors were shocked to see the reduced state of their own,
- mostly middle-class relatives, who must also scrounge for clean
- water and make do with rationed flour that is often cut with
- sawdust. "The children looked thinner," noted Chicago urologist
- Emil Totonchi, who also judged his brother, a Baghdad physician,
- to be "clinically depressed." Said Totonchi: "When I looked into
- the faces of my relatives, I saw there was something major
- lacking. I didn't see much of life or hope--just bare
- existence projected so strongly."
- </p>
- <p> Demoralization is a serious problem among medical workers.
- Many doctors and nurses fled during the war and have not
- returned. Those who stayed are overworked and still
- shell-shocked from their wartime experiences. At Baghdad's
- Yarmouk hospital, chief surgeon Boghos Boghossian remembers when
- more than 300 bodies were delivered from the Amiriyah bomb
- shelter, many charred beyond recognition. There were only 20
- burn beds to receive them. Candlelight replaced electricity
- throughout the hospital, except in the operating theaters, to
- which all electricity from the generator was diverted. "It was
- like being thrown back into the Middle Ages," says Boghossian.
- </p>
- <p> In southern cities, where fierce fighting erupted between
- Shi`ite rebels and the government, healthworkers were caught in
- the cross fire. Three floors of Karbala's Husaini hospital were
- destroyed, and blood and bullet holes are still visible on
- walls and doors. One doctor there tells of walking down a
- hallway where dead and wounded lined every inch of the floor and
- of being unable to tell which stray limb belonged to which
- body. For weeks, dogs feasted on decomposing remains in the
- courtyard between the wards.
- </p>
- <p> Across Iraq, doctors and officials say they are relying
- almost entirely on relief aid to keep going. The government has
- been unable to purchase equipment because the country's funds
- remain frozen. Supplies stockpiled before the war were lost in
- the ensuing chaos and civil uprisings.
- </p>
- <p> While the total amount of aid reaching the country is
- impossible to calibrate, a massive mobilization by UNICEF and
- the International Committee of the Red Cross is under way.
- However, the situation for the summer remains grim. Iraqi health
- officials and Western observers say that without an immediate
- lifting of sanctions, at least as they affect the country's
- ability to import food and medicine, tens of thousands of
- children will die, the victims of a war that, for them, is still
- being waged.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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