BASRA, Iraq - The cranky ring
of the old telephone startles Dr. Faris Abdul Abbas awake. He
glances at his watch. It's just past midnight, the dark beginning to
a new day at Basra Maternity and Pediatrics Hospital.
The chief resident picks up the receiver. A 30-year-old woman has
suffered a cervical tear during childbirth. Now she is in shock from
loss of blood. Abbas is wanted in the delivery room.
He is preparing to leave his cramped office when the phone rings
again. Four-year-old Nawris Khatan, a favorite of the hospital
staff, has arrived at the trauma center in cardiac arrest. A
cherubic little girl whose name is Arabic for "seagull," Nawris is
severely anemic. Her parents have been scouring the hospitals and
blood banks of Iraq's second-largest city for more than a week in
search of blood for her monthly transfusion. They have had no
success.
 Fatima Sajed kisses her
comatose son on the last day of his life in Baghdad's
al-Monsour Pediatric Hospital. Without cytotoxins to treat Ali
Hagem's retinal blastoma, the cancer spread. U.N. sanctions
deny doctors the basic medicines they need to treat curable
diseases. Sajed said Ali was the fourth of her seven children
to die in the last decade. BRAD CLIFT/HARTFORD COURANT
|
Woman and child
both need type B-positive blood immediately.
Abbas dials the number for the hospital blood bank, but he is not
hopeful. With plastic blood bags scarce under U.N. sanctions, the
hospital canceled all elective surgery months ago. For all other
procedures, blood -when it's available - is rationed sparingly.
The hospital blood bank has just one unit of B-positive, barely
enough for one patient. Abbas will decide who will live and who will
die.
The 33-year-old pediatrician walks the darkened hallway to the
trauma center. He will not tell Nawris' young parents that he is
giving the blood to the woman, an otherwise healthy mother of three.
Instead, he tells them there is no blood, and asks them to pray with
him. Fighting back tears, he begs God to spare the child until
morning, when some might become available.
Back in his office, Abbas lays his head on his desk and cries.
Dawn is still distant when Nawris dies.
"It is very difficult to work in these disaster conditions,"
Abbas says softly, as another hot morning breaks over Basra. "This
is just one instance. There are many, many instances like it all the
time."
The U.N. embargo has devastated all of life in Iraq. But nowhere
is the deprivation more evident than in the once-modern health care
system, where sanctions deny doctors the medicine and equipment they
need to save patients dying of the curable diseases burgeoning amid
the wreckage of war. U.N. officials estimate more than 1 million
Iraqis have died in the last decade as a direct result of the
sanctions.
The embargo is harvesting children. Before the Persian Gulf War,
when food was plentiful and clean water readily available, the
greatest pediatric health problem in Iraq was obesity. Now, with
widespread food shortages and contaminated drinking water,
undernourished children are stalked by cholera and typhoid. UNICEF
blames the sanctions for the deaths of more than 500,000 Iraqi
children under 5 since 1991.
 Mothers cradling sick and
malnourished children wait for the attention of pediatrician
Hussein Mohammed at the Basra Maternity and Pediatrics
Hospital. Dysentery and gastroenteritis are epidemic in Iraq,
and chronic malnutrition leaves children more vulnerable to
pneumonia, bronchitis and other infections. BRAD
CLIFT/HARTFORD COURANT
|
Officials in the
United States, the strongest supporter of the sanctions, blame the
suffering on Iraqi President Saddam Hussein. They say Saddam can end
the sanctions by allowing U.N. inspections to ensure Iraq is not
developing nuclear, chemical or biological weapons.
But the embargo does not appear to be affecting Saddam or his
friends, who have billions of dollars in hard currency, access to
high-quality health care and a history of indifference to the
suffering of the people. The regime stopped cooperating with weapons
inspections in 1998. The United Nations withdrew its inspectors; the
regime says they will not be allowed to return.
It is the people who are being punished. UNICEF says thousands
are dying every month.
"This is unacceptable in medicine, to have patients die because
of a shortage of drugs and supplies that are readily available
everywhere else," Abbas says. "It is a crime against humanity."
Basra, wedged between Iran
and Kuwait, bore the brunt of the gulf war. Now it is bearing the
brunt of the embargo. Sanctions have kept the city from repairing
sanitation facilities and power plants bombed during Operation
Desert Storm. Now the canals that made this port the Venice of the
Middle East bubble green with raw sewage. The public water supply is
contaminated with human waste. Electricity flickers off for hours
every day, leaving precious food and medicine to spoil in the desert
heat. There are not enough trucks to haul away the garbage that rots
in the streets.
Dysentery and gastroenteritis are epidemic. Chronic malnutrition
leaves children more vulnerable to pneumonia, bronchitis and other
infections. Polio and meningitis are making comebacks. Cholera and
typhoid are thriving.
"Before 1991, these problems were out of our minds," says Dr. Ali
Faisal Jawad, president of Basra Maternity and Pediatrics Hospital.
"We have had to go back to the textbooks to learn how we should
treat them."
Jawad's 320-bed hospital, the largest children's medical facility
in southern Iraq, was among the best equipped in the country when it
opened in 1986. It had CT scan and ultrasound machines, incubators
to nurture premature babies and centrifuges to separate blood parts.
Over the years, much of the equipment has worn out, and spare
parts are unavailable. The hospital's emergency generator, in
constant use since the gulf war, can power only the operating room
and the trauma center. Without consistent electricity to run air
conditioning or transfer systems in other parts of the hospital,
windows are left open. Mothers brush flies from sick children lying
two and three to a threadbare mattress on rusting iron beds. The
halls reek of the gasoline with which orderlies clean the floors -
it is the cheapest solvent in this oil-rich, food-and-medicine-poor
nation.
Doctors here, many of whom have studied in Britain or the United
States, earn the equivalent of $4 a month. They share worn
photocopies of decades-old textbooks. They have little access to
current research and no access to the Internet.
Nurses earn less than doctors. Many have abandoned the
profession, leaving mothers and grandmothers to care for their sick
children, administering medicines and watching for changes.
The hospital needs scalpels and clamps for surgery, antibiotics
for infections and cytotoxins for chemotherapy. There is not enough
specialized formula to treat underweight babies. Syringes and
surgical gloves are washed and reused.
 A girl waits with her
parents in the cancer ward at Baghdad’s Saddam Pediatric
Hospital for chemotherapy to treat her leukemia. Iraqi doctors
say they have seen a sharp rise in birth defects and cancers
since the 1991 Persian Gulf War. They blame depleted uranium,
the radioactive ammunition fired by U.S. troops. BRAD
CLIFT/HARTFORD
COURANT
|
"I do not
think Americans would accept this for their children," Jawad says.
"What is the difference between a sick American child and a sick
Iraqi child?"
Visitors entering the hospital must step over a crude graffito.
"Down USA," someone has painted in sickly yellow across the
flagstones of the courtyard.
The mothers line up in the main hallway of the pediatrics wing,
cradling their underweight children in the folds of their
traditional black robes as they wait for the attention of Dr.
Hussein Mohammed.
Marium Talib cries in dry rasps as she hangs limply across her
mother's arms. At 6 months, she weighs 10 pounds, little more than
half her healthy weight. The skin around her eyes is brown and
scaly; her arms and legs and belly are swollen. A needle protrudes
from her head, the only place doctors could find a vein large enough
to take nourishment.
Her mother, 21-year-old Sajida Naim, explains that the family
lives in the al-Moufakia Flats, a notoriously squalid housing
development that has no drinking water. The water the family draws
from a neighborhood nearby is contaminated with sewage. Marium now
suffers from gastroenteritis. Mohammed says the hospital is giving
the baby medicine to clear up her diarrhea and protein to improve
her weight, but he expects the problem to recur when she returns
home and resumes drinking the water.
It may be too late to help Aleah Mohammed. The 1-year-old, who is
no relation to her pediatrician, weighs less than 15 pounds and has
stopped feeding. Weakened by gastroenteritis, she has developed a
bronchitis that is not responding to the simple antibiotics Mohammed
has prescribed.
The future is even bleaker for 11-month-old Abbas Abed
al-Hussein. The brown skin of his face has turned a pale yellow, and
his dark hair has taken on a reddish tint. His swollen arms and legs
stick out from his body.
Abbas is one several babies at the hospital with kala azar, a
disease transmitted by flies now flourishing because sanctions
prevent Iraq from importing an effective insecticide. The hospital
does not have the drug to treat kala azar or the separated blood
parts to make treatment effective. Mohammed expects little Abbas to
die within days.
"This is not a difficult disease," he says. "But under sanctions,
there is nothing we can do."
Amid such conditions, more
than one in eight children in southern and central Iraq dies before
reaching his or her fifth birthday.
Before the gulf war, Iraq boasted a free public health care
system that was among the most advanced in the Arab world.
"This was a well-developed system, a well-funded system, and
there was a high level of skill among Iraqi specialists," says
Richard Garfield, a Columbia University epidemiologist who studies
public health under sanctions. "It was never the healthiest place in
the world, but medical care standards probably were not that far
from Western Europe, which made it look less like a Third-World
country."
 A worker carefully wraps a
newborn baby in white linen for burial at a children’s
cemetery in Basra. The cemetery, with thousands of graves, is
nearly full. Unicef blames the embargo for the deaths of more
than 500,000 Iraqi children. BRAD CLIFT/HARTFORD
COURANT
|
Under the
embargo, Iraqi hospitals now are limited to the equipment, medicine
and supplies that may be purchased through a U.N.-monitored
oil-for-food exchange. The Security Council blocks orders that could
also have military uses.
In 1989, the last full year before Iraq invaded Kuwait, the
Ministry of Health spent $500 million on medicines and medical
supplies for the nation's public hospitals.
In the four years since the oil-for-food program began, the
committee has allowed Iraq to import $980.4 million in
health-related goods and is holding requests for $189 million more.
The committee has held up orders for heart and lung machines,
syringes and thermometers, ambulances and refrigerated trucks.
The United States, which leads the 15 council members in placing
"holds" on contracts, has drawn criticism for undermining
humanitarian aid to Iraq.
"The United Nations has always been on the side of the vulnerable
and the weak, and has always sought to relieve suffering, yet here
we are accused of causing suffering to an entire population," U.N.
Secretary-General Kofi Annan said during a Security Council session
in March. "We are in danger of losing the argument, or the
propaganda war - if we haven't already lost it - about who is
responsible for this situation in Iraq - President Saddam Hussein or
the United Nations."
U.S. officials defend the holds as necessary to ensure that Iraq
is not obtaining military equipment. They accuse the regime of
hoarding medicine and equipment to increase the suffering of the
people in order to gain support for lifting the sanctions without
dismantling its weapons programs.
"There is enough food and enough medicine to care for and meet
the needs of the Iraqi people," National Security Council spokesman
P.J. Crowley says. "It is a manipulation by Saddam, using the
suffering of the Iraqi people that he could solve if he wanted to.
... We care more about the Iraqi people than he does."
U.N. officials say they have not seen credible evidence that the
regime is withholding humanitarian goods. They say an exodus of
experienced managers and the deterioration of storage and
transportation systems - themselves effects of the sanctions -
sometimes slow distribution.
"I think the Iraqis want to be helpful and cooperative," says Tun
Myat, the U.N. coordinator for humanitarian aid to Iraq. "At the
higher levels I have met with people who are clearly very sincere in
saying that they want to be cooperative and collaborative and which
they try to be within the limits of their own constraints."
"The State Department has done a very good job at figuring out
what images and sound bites will work to demonize the leaders of
Iraq, but it doesn't do very much justice to what's actually
happening," says Garfield, the Columbia epidemiologist. "It may play
in Peoria, but it doesn't help fix the situation in Iraq."
The large stainless-steel
box in the morgue at Basra Maternity and Pediatrics Hospital is
called a refrigerator, but without power, it keeps no cooler than
room temperature, which has risen to more than 100 degrees. The
stench of decay fills the dusty, tiled room.
Dr. Abed al-Kareem Hussein opens the doors and pulls out the
trays. Cardboard boxes made to ship packets of cereal and rolls of
aluminum foil now hold the bodies of babies.
This is where the hospital keeps the corpses of children whose
parents are unable to pay the $3 required for burial. The hospital
will keep each for a few weeks before burying them in a pauper's
field.
Hussein has counted 13 tiny corpses when an orderly arrives with
another box. This one is marked "Tiffany Milk Biscuits." Inside is
the body of a newborn who died after delivery, the fourth death in
the hospital today.
The cause? Hussein, who was not the attending physician, shrugs.
"Sanctions."
Copyright © 2000 Myway Corp.
###