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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>