Author Topic: Medical Group Says Access to Medical Help in Somalia Down Drastically  (Read 44465 times)

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Offline Terror man

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  • و من يتق الله يجعل له من امره يسرأ
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The medical group Doctors Without Borders is reporting a drastic decline in medical care for people in the Somali capital Mogadishu .
Doctors Without Borders says that only 250 hospital beds are now available in Mogadishu, down from 800 at the start of the year. About 75 percent of the staff in those hospitals have also fled.

The group says that people are terrified about leaving their homes and are not getting even basic treatment. It says that the warring parties in Somalia, which include Islamic insurgents, and forces of the transitional government, are not allowing doctors to work, a fact it calls shocking and absolutely unacceptable.

The situation has only gotten worse in recent months. Doctors Without Borders says it is seeing a new wave of people escaping the violence. Some 30,000 people are estimated to have fled in may alone to the west. An MSF worker who has worked there,  says malnutrition among the displaced is high.

"During the month of may, from 1,500 children under five in the area we found that almost 38 percent present signs of acute malnutrition and among those almost 12 percent present signs of severe acute malnutrition, which for a better understanding means that 12 percent of this population is at immediate risk of dying," said

Somalia has been without an effective government since 1991. Conditions united states of america say maintains strong links to al-Qaida.

Doctors Without Borders has treated some 60,000 people in that time but says even that is not nearly as much as it wants to do. "We're only able to reach a fraction of the enormous population in this city which requires assistance and that is, yeah it's making us feel extremely frustrated and angered that it is not possible to bring the medical assistance that we wish to provide in the manner that is required by those people," said Colin McIlreavy, the Somalia mission chief for MSF. "There's a willingness by MSF to do more yet we are constrained by the ongoing and we feel increasing level of insecurity."

The group says it is trying to talk to all parties in the conflict and has been able to work effectively in similarly chaotic situations. While its own employees have not been specifically targeted, it argues that insecurity is too high to provide medical care to people who need surgery or other more complicated treatment


فليحد ر الد ين ن يخالفون عن امره ان تصيبهم فتنة او يصيبهم عداب اليم


Offline Dudieezper

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Re: Medical Group Says Access to Medical Help in Somalia Down Drastically
« Reply #1 on: January 25, 2010, 07:11:17 PM »
The situation for the medical hospital has only gotten worse in the previous months. The thing here is the government or the local medical department should do something about the situation. IT could really affect the medical stability on the area.