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

EUR -
AED 3.997444
AFN 72.917609
ALL 98.548561
AMD 421.281094
ANG 1.962696
AOA 992.010789
ARS 1080.448247
AUD 1.652739
AWG 1.958992
AZN 1.853391
BAM 1.95162
BBD 2.19879
BDT 130.141229
BGN 1.955422
BHD 0.410305
BIF 3150.711667
BMD 1.088329
BND 1.43297
BOB 7.542052
BRL 6.288688
BSD 1.088967
BTN 91.592627
BWP 14.501337
BYN 3.564064
BYR 21331.243068
BZD 2.195158
CAD 1.512837
CDF 3095.207244
CHF 0.939776
CLF 0.037636
CLP 1038.504992
CNY 7.725716
CNH 7.748133
COP 4804.971334
CRC 558.902793
CUC 1.088329
CUP 28.840711
CVE 110.955397
CZK 25.339337
DJF 193.417611
DKK 7.458206
DOP 65.745986
DZD 144.766586
EGP 53.392938
ERN 16.324931
ETB 131.742429
FJD 2.446835
FKP 0.832755
GBP 0.840239
GEL 2.960643
GGP 0.832755
GHS 17.794458
GIP 0.832755
GMD 77.809098
GNF 9393.365106
GTQ 8.413977
GYD 228.037814
HKD 8.459307
HNL 27.262972
HRK 7.497529
HTG 143.313014
HUF 408.112585
IDR 17154.019744
ILS 4.081869
IMP 0.832755
INR 91.575081
IQD 1425.710634
IRR 45810.4795
ISK 149.111956
JEP 0.832755
JMD 172.071412
JOD 0.771732
JPY 165.474395
KES 140.39386
KGS 93.379565
KHR 4440.381303
KMF 493.938225
KPW 979.49561
KRW 1497.241019
KWD 0.333562
KYD 0.907581
KZT 532.130142
LAK 23861.607613
LBP 97459.837248
LKR 319.27609
LRD 208.904436
LSL 19.17651
LTL 3.213552
LVL 0.658319
LYD 5.24532
MAD 10.70373
MDL 19.439894
MGA 5022.63675
MKD 61.500779
MMK 3534.849255
MNT 3698.141048
MOP 8.718764
MRU 43.549446
MUR 49.8783
MVR 16.770451
MWK 1888.250716
MXN 21.916894
MYR 4.758723
MZN 69.555487
NAD 19.176249
NGN 1788.983868
NIO 39.996323
NOK 11.969303
NPR 146.548124
NZD 1.820469
OMR 0.419022
PAB 1.089097
PEN 4.107902
PGK 4.252917
PHP 63.616098
PKR 302.691436
PLN 4.356378
PYG 8576.628295
QAR 3.962058
RON 4.973991
RSD 116.99815
RUB 107.743549
RWF 1483.392056
SAR 4.087692
SBD 9.054823
SCR 16.063694
SDG 654.635621
SEK 11.656017
SGD 1.435511
SHP 0.832755
SLE 24.759833
SLL 22821.705779
SOS 621.435641
SRD 37.989153
STD 22526.207341
SVC 9.528589
SYP 2734.458871
SZL 19.176093
THB 36.724582
TJS 11.598375
TMT 3.809151
TND 3.367294
TOP 2.548974
TRY 37.383755
TTD 7.38239
TWD 34.712791
TZS 2928.554388
UAH 45.137427
UGX 3985.462875
USD 1.088329
UYU 45.372808
UZS 13957.816261
VEF 3942527.991678
VES 46.584467
VND 27556.483391
VUV 129.208606
WST 3.048609
XAF 654.572905
XAG 0.032264
XAU 0.0004
XCD 2.941263
XDR 0.81807
XOF 655.719475
XPF 119.331742
YER 272.463186
ZAR 19.078784
ZMK 9796.267106
ZMW 29.213229
ZWL 350.441406
  • RYCEF

    0.0200

    7.1

    +0.28%

  • RBGPF

    5.4100

    66.41

    +8.15%

  • CMSC

    0.1400

    24.67

    +0.57%

  • AZN

    -0.0650

    71.355

    -0.09%

  • SCS

    0.1750

    12.315

    +1.42%

  • NGG

    0.1200

    64.38

    +0.19%

  • GSK

    0.1400

    37.02

    +0.38%

  • RIO

    -0.2800

    65.05

    -0.43%

  • RELX

    -0.0150

    47.065

    -0.03%

  • CMSD

    0.0955

    24.9052

    +0.38%

  • BTI

    0.0300

    35.1

    +0.09%

  • VOD

    -0.0340

    9.316

    -0.36%

  • JRI

    0.0350

    13.085

    +0.27%

  • BP

    0.5450

    29.775

    +1.83%

  • BCE

    -3.0000

    29.1

    -10.31%

  • BCC

    0.3200

    134.53

    +0.24%

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."

(O.Joost--BBZ)