The Prague Post - In Yemen's civil war, decaying hospitals on life support

EUR -
AED 4.293926
AFN 80.664061
ALL 97.673606
AMD 448.805894
ANG 2.092137
AOA 1072.008381
ARS 1473.86814
AUD 1.777194
AWG 2.107191
AZN 1.992006
BAM 1.954969
BBD 2.359897
BDT 142.119594
BGN 1.956648
BHD 0.440707
BIF 3438.141097
BMD 1.169038
BND 1.495564
BOB 8.093595
BRL 6.502078
BSD 1.168803
BTN 100.195413
BWP 15.604368
BYN 3.824874
BYR 22913.14706
BZD 2.347702
CAD 1.601524
CDF 3373.844424
CHF 0.930865
CLF 0.029161
CLP 1119.038818
CNY 8.380309
CNH 8.386416
COP 4674.983423
CRC 589.449462
CUC 1.169038
CUP 30.97951
CVE 110.795635
CZK 24.665189
DJF 207.761914
DKK 7.461795
DOP 70.497539
DZD 151.705573
EGP 57.855667
ERN 17.535572
ETB 160.045846
FJD 2.621276
FKP 0.861628
GBP 0.866082
GEL 3.16855
GGP 0.861628
GHS 12.162504
GIP 0.861628
GMD 83.590727
GNF 10119.194341
GTQ 8.978184
GYD 244.526067
HKD 9.176307
HNL 30.804608
HRK 7.533988
HTG 153.404797
HUF 399.5543
IDR 18972.787189
ILS 3.894218
IMP 0.861628
INR 100.328609
IQD 1531.439931
IRR 49231.122092
ISK 142.400984
JEP 0.861628
JMD 186.90056
JOD 0.828894
JPY 172.334969
KES 151.39488
KGS 102.232832
KHR 4700.702671
KMF 492.340851
KPW 1052.173978
KRW 1612.291055
KWD 0.357481
KYD 0.973978
KZT 610.670442
LAK 25169.39103
LBP 104721.265739
LKR 351.480608
LRD 234.977068
LSL 20.949609
LTL 3.451866
LVL 0.70714
LYD 6.307006
MAD 10.52427
MDL 19.78759
MGA 5178.839256
MKD 61.56729
MMK 2453.70284
MNT 4194.046924
MOP 9.450302
MRU 46.415189
MUR 53.168296
MVR 18.007558
MWK 2030.039055
MXN 21.79146
MYR 4.971339
MZN 74.772119
NAD 20.949604
NGN 1786.89858
NIO 42.962591
NOK 11.839321
NPR 160.312861
NZD 1.945479
OMR 0.449493
PAB 1.168808
PEN 4.145998
PGK 4.822327
PHP 66.037214
PKR 332.445259
PLN 4.266015
PYG 9058.149949
QAR 4.256005
RON 5.081579
RSD 117.102724
RUB 91.189371
RWF 1676.400657
SAR 4.384424
SBD 9.733981
SCR 16.480784
SDG 702.011685
SEK 11.176827
SGD 1.496958
SHP 0.91868
SLE 26.307644
SLL 24514.149043
SOS 668.109564
SRD 43.49699
STD 24196.728708
SVC 10.226653
SYP 15199.779355
SZL 20.949595
THB 37.935718
TJS 11.296147
TMT 4.103324
TND 3.393762
TOP 2.738009
TRY 46.955356
TTD 7.940625
TWD 34.1849
TZS 3039.499492
UAH 48.831645
UGX 4189.219426
USD 1.169038
UYU 47.259913
UZS 14794.17774
VES 133.584256
VND 30528.845862
VUV 140.012408
WST 3.21431
XAF 655.672706
XAG 0.030416
XAU 0.000348
XCD 3.159384
XDR 0.812965
XOF 655.250067
XPF 119.331742
YER 282.732293
ZAR 20.963079
ZMK 10522.750076
ZMW 27.056616
ZWL 376.429796
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

In Yemen's civil war, decaying hospitals on life support
In Yemen's civil war, decaying hospitals on life support

In Yemen's civil war, decaying hospitals on life support

Five-year-old Amina Nasser hugs her toys in a decrepit cancer ward in Yemen, her life in the hands of a healthcare system pushed to the brink of collapse by grinding conflict.

Text size:

Rudimentary equipment, peeling paint and the stench of urine are constant reminders of how Yemen's seven-year-old war has ravaged essential public services.

Amina, two months into her treatment for leukaemia at the Al-Sadaqa hospital in Yemen's southern port city of Aden, is one of millions whose lives have been upended.

"We didn't have any other choice," her mother Anissa Nasser said, sitting with her daughter in the rundown paediatric oncology ward.

Amina gets free chemotherapy, but her unemployed parents must find the cash to somehow pay for other medicines and tests.

"We wanted to send her for treatment abroad," the mother said, but that was far beyond their reach.

The World Bank estimates just half of Yemen's medical facilities are fully functional, and that 80 percent of the population have problems accessing food, drinking water and health services.

Three-quarters of Yemen's 30 million population depend on aid.

- Dying of hunger -

It is the legacy of a war that started when Iran-backed Huthi rebels seized the capital Sanaa in 2014.

The internationally recognised government fled south to Aden, and a Saudi-led military coalition intervened in 2015.

Fighting continues. The UN has estimated the conflict has killed 377,000 people, both directly and through hunger and disease.

Some parts of Al-Sadaqa hospital have funding; the malnutrition centre, backed by United Nations agencies, has polished floors and smells of detergent.

Tiny, emaciated children, shrunken by their hunger, lie hooked up to drips.

The UN, which has called Yemen the world's worst humanitarian disaster, warned this week that the number of people in famine conditions is projected to increase five-fold this year to 161,000.

Some 2.2 million children are expected to be acutely malnourished in the coming months, with over half a million children already facing life-threatening starvation.

And the UN has itself warned of a dire funding shortfall ahead; on Wednesday, a pledging conference raised less than a third of the money it said was needed to prevent a humanitarian catastrophe.

In the hospital, donor funding means that at least in the ward for malnourished children, there is electricity and the staff have been paid.

But with medics stretched thin, funding for one area means other areas can be neglected.

If there is support for one section of the hospital, then "everyone wants to work there, hoping to improve their living situation," said Kafaya Al-Jazei, the hospital's director-general.

- 'Deplorable' -

In Aden, public hospitals lack basic equipment as well as staff -- with doctors and nurses preferring the higher salaries at private clinics or international organisations.

In another Aden hospital, Al-Joumhouria, a battered bronze plaque in Arabic and English marks the year 1954, during British colonial rule, when Queen Elizabeth II laid the founding stone.

Today, the building is in a pitiful state, with shortages of staff, drugs and equipment.

"The hospital isn't maintained or air-conditioned," said nurse Zubeida Said. "There are leaks in the bathrooms. The building is old and dilapidated."

Hospital staff have protested the "deplorable" conditions, said the hospital's interim chief, Salem Al-Shabhi, who hires medical students to meet the staff shortfall, for 10,000 riyals (about $9) a day.

Final-year medical students are under no illusions about what awaits them, with some hoping to leave Yemen when they graduate.

"We want a job with a good salary in a safe place," said Eyad Khaled.

But classmate Heba Ebadi, who plans to specialise in gynaecology, is determined to help her country "even if the health system gets worse".

"We want to help the people here," she said. "Who else will help them? We have to stay here."

Q.Fiala--TPP