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In Iraq, The Doctors Are Out

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babylonsister Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Oct-18-08 02:58 PM
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In Iraq, The Doctors Are Out
In Iraq, The Doctors Are Out

A country in dire need of professional help—can its wounds be healed?
Wathiq Khuzaie / Getty Images for Newsweek

Kill or Cure: A young patient waits at the entrance of a Baghdad medical complex
By Larry Kaplow | NEWSWEEK
Published Oct 18, 2008
From the magazine issue dated Oct 27, 2008


Doctor Wasim bickers with his wife over where to raise their three kids. A pharmacist by profession, she longs for her friends and relatives back home in Baghdad. He suggests she settle in where they live now, amid the gleaming skyscrapers and seaside confines of Abu Dhabi. "It's like building on sand," she answers, refusing to think of their new home as anything but temporary. Nevertheless, the 45-year-old internist isn't ready to risk returning to Iraq—or even to let his full name be used. Four years ago on a Baghdad street a gang of kidnappers dragged him from his car. "You're the doctor," they said. "We've been following you for months." They held him hostage for two weeks of drunken beatings and cigarette burns before receiving a $15,000 ransom, dumping him on a roadside and warning him to get out of Iraq. He found a good job at a hospital in Abu Dhabi. He likes the reliable air conditioning and the safe streets. And Baghdad scares him. "I have nightmares every night," he says.

Baghdad isn't quite as violent as it was when Wasim left. But bringing real stability to the city will require essentials that only educated professionals can deliver—things like dependable electricity, steady jobs, good schools and decent health care. The problem is that like Wasim, thousands of engineers, entrepreneurs, teachers, accountants and doctors have fled the country. Unlike most other refugees, they had the skills to land residence permits and good jobs elsewhere, and they have less incentive than most to return to a land where they could again be subject to the brutal dictates of gun-wielding illiterates. Even ordinary Iraqis have been slow to go home: out of roughly 1.5 million who fled the war and its aftermath, only 60,000 or so had returned from exile through September (the latest available figure), while about 150,000 of the roughly 1.8 million internally displaced had returned to their old neighborhoods.

The medical profession in particular has been hollowed out. Iraq's health-care system used to be the envy of the Arab world. Even in the 1990s, when sanctions and Saddam Hussein's worsening misrule crippled much of the country, people came from all over the region to study medicine or seek treatment. But after the U.S. invasion, doctors became targets for ransom kidnappings and assassination. Upwards of 120 physicians were killed. Some were gunned down in their own clinics. Things got worse than ever after 2005, when loyalists of the radical cleric Moqtada al-Sadr gained control of the Health Ministry. Hospitals turned into Shiite militia bases where Sunnis could be killed on sight.

The Sadrists are in retreat now, but the doctors are still missing. The current health minister, Salih Hasnawi, estimates that roughly half the country's doctors have fled, from a prewar total of as many as 30,000 or more. He says only about 800 health professionals have returned—and that number includes not only doctors but also dentists and pharmacists. Sunnis are especially hesitant about going back. Many leaders in their fields have abandoned their posts: Iraq's top neurosurgeon; the chief of Baghdad's central morgue and forensic center; the doctor who set up the country's postwar emergency coordination center to deal with bombing victims and other mass casualties. The wholesale disappearance of some specialties compounds the tragedy for a war-traumatized nation. There's a serious shortage of doctors and therapists familiar with advanced prosthetics. Worse yet, the country is down to 80 or so psychiatrists, from several hundred before the war.

more...

http://www.newsweek.com/id/164496
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LynnTheDem Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Oct-18-08 03:01 PM
Response to Original message
1. No.
Not for many generations.

We ILLEGALLY launcehed an UNPROVOKED INVASION and OCCUPATION on the people of Iraq.

They had done NOTHING whatsofuckingever.

And we INVADED them.

America laughed and applauded and oooohed and awwwwwed as we dropped BOMBS on WOMEN, PREGNANT WOMEN, OLD PEOPLE, KIDS, BABIES.


And we`re still doing it.

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babylonsister Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Oct-18-08 03:07 PM
Response to Reply #1
2. I hear you, Lynn. I'm as disgusted with us as I can be.
I hope we wake the hell up. I just posted a link from an Iraqi paper letting Americans know how they really feel. And they have every right to feel that way.

http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=103x394329
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LynnTheDem Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Oct-18-08 03:28 PM
Response to Reply #2
3. Disgusted...ashamed...
I'll never get over it. I'll never get over attending so many funerals, of seeing so much pain... I'll never get over how immoral, corrupt, disgraceful, shockingly disgusting America under the bush regime has behaved.

I would NEVER forgive a drunk driver if he or she killed my child...most of us wouldn't; most of us would never forgive anyone raping and murdering our child; yet we think the people of Iraq will someday some how FORGIVE US for bombing and slaughtering and raping and murdering THEIR KIDS???!!!

I don't think so. I know you don't think so.

But then, you and I, babylonsister, we happen to believe the people of Iraq are PEOPLE. Just like us.

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MasonJar Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Oct-18-08 04:27 PM
Response to Original message
4. There is one thing that I agree with Colin Powell--we broke it, we fix it.
I do not agree that the Iraq surplus should be used to repair what we ruined. We owe these citizens of the world an immense amount of assistance. We can never return their lost loved ones, but we can and must restore their infrastructure. We must leave their country so they can refresh and restore, but we need to pay for both. It will cost a lot less than the destruction did and the continuation of the war will. John McCain is crazy; how can the USA win a war built on deception and cruelty? We lost as soon as we began!!!!!!!!!!!
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Diclotican Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Oct-18-08 06:50 PM
Response to Reply #4
5. MasonJar
MasonJar

You can not say we doesn't was waring you all there in the US.. We on this part of the world where I am from warned, and warned how bad it could be, if US was to invade Iraq..

But now, did the Republican Dominated Senate, Congress, and the "Iam the war president" Administration lisent to us?.. No, they do not. And they was going to that silly, stupid horrible war... That for the most part the World as an whole was against..

And now US are ruling over a broke country, and are at least broke itself... And the world would never forget, even that the intention Span of an average american are just 20 minutes.. That US wa destroying and give the fanatical part of the Islamic faith a new heaven in Iraq.. Or if the best are to came out of it. No honor to the american occupier because Iraq would not be better before the last american soldier are out of the country, and the iraqis have to work it out them self how they want to be ruled in the future..

We who was against this war warned, and warned.. And now US have it.. A country they must fix.. But it would be a hard time before the regular american would understand how destroyed Iraq indeed are... And how long and how many money it indeed will cost before Iraq is up and going againg... It is an disgrace any way you want it, if you ask me.

Diclotican

Sorry my bad english, not my native language
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