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PAKISTAN: Quake-hit women still
await medical treatment
October 18, 2005 - (IRIN) - Zubaida Bibi lies
on a narrow cot outside the ruins of her home. Her infant son Wali
lies besides her. Every tiny kick by the baby causes his mother
to grimace in pain.
The only medicine she has taken since the 8 October
earthquake that devastated her village of Shinkiari, 90 km north
of the Pakistan capital Islamabad, are eight tablets of paracetamol-based
analgesic handed out by a team of medical students passing through
the area.
“Both my legs are broken at the ankle,”
Zubaida explained. “I was pinned under a cement beam for over
six hours. I cannot move even to go to the bathroom. My daughter,
aged nine, must help me with even the simplest task, and the white
tablets I was given by some doctors who visited have run out.”
Like hundreds of other badly injured women, Zubaida
will not allow male doctors to treat her, despite her obvious agony.
Some women more seriously injured than her have declined treatment,
even when husbands, fathers or brothers have begged them to permit
doctors to examine them.
“We cannot allow strange men near us, or let
them touch our bodies,” explained Razia Bibi, 53, from the
Shangla area of Malakand. “The thought is repulsive to us,
even if our male family members grant permission.”
Her arm, apparently broken in two places, is badly
swollen and turning an ominous blue. Only a rough, home-made sling
supports it. Like her, many other injured women are willing to endure
immense pain, perhaps even risk the loss of limb or life, in order
to maintain strict, centuries-old traditional codes.
“It is the way our women and girls are raised.
Nothing can change that,” explained Faraaduddin Khan, 72,
a resident of Mansehra. “In some cases, their husbands have
begged them to seek treatment, and some have done so, but most prefer
to bear their pain stoically than to unveil their bodies before
men from outside their immediate families.”
As a clearer profile emerges of the quake’s
victims in the tiny villages scattered across the mountain terrain
of Mansehra and Malakand divisions and in Pakistan-administered
Kashmir, women and children appear to have born the brunt of the
quake’s devastation.
While thousands of children were crushed under school
buildings as roofs and walls caved in during morning lessons, women
were caught inside their homes.
In the deeply conservative areas affected by the
disaster, women rarely venture far from their homes, while men are
far more likely to be labouring in fields, tending livestock or
working in markets, shops or other locations.
As a result, thousands of women have died and many
more been badly injured by the bricks, stones and slabs of concrete
that fell on top of them. Some were pinned under rubble for hours,
even days, before being rescued.
Across the Mansehra area, where shelterless villagers
continue to survive outdoors, many women lie behind thin curtains
of cloth that offer some privacy, or out in the open, on cots, sheets
of cloth or pieces of plastic. Their painful moans fill the air
in some locations.
Many of these women have badly fractured and crushed
limbs, head injuries or deep gashes. Some of the cuts ooze blood
and puss, while children and other women tending the victims try
to keep flies at bay. But in Mansehra, Battgram, Shinkiari, Shangla
and elsewhere, many have yet to receive even basic medical treatment.
“Women are reluctant to allow us to bandage
injuries, especially if these are on the torso rather than the limbs
or face,” said Dr Fayyaz Khan from the Kashmir town of Bagh,
about 150 km from Islamabad. “They demand women doctors and
the handful working with us have really been on duty around the
clock to treat the dozens of seriously hurt women being brought
in.”
Dr Samina Latif, a final-year medical student from
Rawalpindi who has been working in Bagh for four days, said: “We
were asked to rush up here because of the demand for women doctors.
But it is often difficult for female doctors and nurses to come
here, live in tents and so on, and their families to do not like
them to go up to unknown areas.”
It is even tougher for women to reach the remote
villages perched atop towering hills in the Mansehra and Malakand
areas. While volunteer women doctors and nurses have reached affected
areas, they are mainly based in larger centres at Balakot, Muzaffarabad
and Abbottabad. The huge demand for their services makes it difficult,
even for those willing and physically able to undertake treks of
up to eight or 10 hours, to reach specific villages.
As a result, some women quake victims, particularly
in the Mansehra area, have died from their injuries. In some cases,
medical aid might have saved them. Hundreds have wounds that have
turned septic, making amputation their only option for survival.
Others lying untreated amid the ruins of their villages,
too badly hurt to be carried down perilous mountain tracks, will
almost certainly die, adding to a mounting death toll the Pakistan
foreign office on Monday warned could rise above 200,000.
From: http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=49613&SelectRegion=Asia&SelectCountry=PAKISTAN
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