BAGHDAD - The Baghdad Medical City has begun to look nice in its new coat of
paint.
It does not look that nice to Dr. Hammad Hussein, ophthalmology resident at
the center. "I have not seen anything which indicates any rebuilding aside
from our new pink and blue colors here where our building and the escape ladders
were painted," he told IPS.
What this largest medical complex in Iraq lacks is medicines, he said. "I'll
prescribe medication and the pharmacy simply does not have it to give to the
patient."
The hospital is short of wheelchairs, half the lifts are broken, and the family
members of patients are being forced to work as nurses because of shortage of
medical personnel, he said.
The Yarmouk hospital in Baghdad has been given new desks and chairs. The new
desk delivered to Dr. Aisha Abdulla sits in the corridor outside her office.
"They should build a lift so patients who can't walk can be taken to surgery,
and instead we have these new desks," she said. "How can I take a
new desk when there are patients dying because we don't have medicine for them?"
The U.S.-based Bechtel Corporation was hired to deliver an assessment of all
damage following the invasion last year and to identify priority reconstruction
projects. Bechtel carried out repair work in about 50 primary healthcare centers
before handing the rest over to USAID, the official aid agency of the U.S. government.
In his book Iraq
Inc., Pratap Chatterjee says USAID spent nearly a year selecting contractors
to rebuild healthcare centers and hospitals before awarding one of the largest
contracts to ABT Associates Inc., a large government and business consultancy
firm based in Massachusetts.
The ABT contract is worth more than $22 million, according to the USAID
Web site.
The contract was to support the Iraqi health ministry with medical equipment
and supplies, distribute grants to health organizations for critical supplies,
and determine specific needs, particularly those of vulnerable groups like women
and children.
USAID says it has provided considerable assistance to the Ministry of Health
in providing healthcare for pregnant women and children, supporting immunization
programs, and refurbishing local health clinics. More than 100 such facilities
have been improved, says USAID spokesman in Baghdad David DeVoss.
The health ministry has provided high-protein biscuits with USAID help to more
than 450,000 children and 200,000 pregnant and nursing mothers facing malnutrition,
DeVoss said.
But this may not be enough.. The United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) says
the number of children suffering from malnutrition has doubled since the March
2003 invasion. About 8 percent of Iraqi children below five suffer from chronic
diarrhea and protein deficiency, it says. UNICEF says that diarrhea caused mainly
by unsafe water is responsible for 70 percent of child deaths in Iraq.
Interim health minister Ala-al-Din al-Awan accuses UNICEF of basing its findings
on questionable methodology.
The Arab news channel al-Jazeera reports that 40 percent of the water system
has been damaged, with supply lines broken or contaminated. A large section
of sewage lines also fail to function as a result of power failures, poor maintenance,
and damage caused by the invasion.
USAID says that more than 1,700 breaks in water pipes have been repaired over
the past year, but admits that more needs to be done.
If the situation is bad in Baghdad, it is much worse in Fallujah. Relief efforts
within Fallujah are not getting the assistance they need from the Ministry of
Health, local aid workers say. The Iraqi Red Crescent (IRC) estimates that up
to 10,000 people remain trapped inside the city, many in severe need of medical
care.
The IRC was able to deliver some supplies to Fallujah in recent days, but the
U.S. military ordered the IRC out of Fallujah Monday because of ongoing military
operations.
USAID spokesperson in the United States Susan Pittman told IPS there were no
civilians in the city. "I don't believe that there is anyone in there yet,"
she said. Rebuilding "assessments" would be carried out once military
operations were completed, she said.
(Inter Press Service)