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Many
doctors have left abroad from unsafe Iraq.
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By
Samir Haddad, IOL Correspondent
BAGHDAD,
August 3, 2005 (IslamOnline.net) – It appears as if doctors have
become something of a rarity in occupied Iraq whose medical system has
been left in tatters since the US-led invasion and its ensuing
violence.
Though
hospitals are bursting at the seams with patients and people injured
in US raids or bloody indiscriminate bombings, doctors who have become
increasingly jittery over the deteriorating security conditions, are
fleeing the scene.
“It
is my dream now to get a job abroad. It is not safe any longer in
Iraq,” cardiologist Rabeh Al-Assal told IslamOnline.net Wednesday,
August 3.
A
July 20 survey by the British NGO Iraq Body Count found that the
US-led occupation forces in Iraq have caused 37 percent of civilian
deaths – some 25,000 in just two years.
The
survey further found that criminals and gangs came close second at 36
percent, while resistance fighters accounted for 9.5 percent.
“It
is a hopeless case, it will take Iraq at least 20 years to recover,”
added frustrated Assal.
Off-Limits
The
unabated violence, which culminated Monday, August 1, in the grisly
beheading and killing of 20 Iraqis by unknown militants in southwest
Baghdad, has made hospitals and clinics off-limits to doctors after
07:00 pm.
Used
to run round-the-clock shifts in the past to treat emergency cases,
doctors now have slashed their working hours to only six hours a day
and sometimes to just two.
“I
nervously carried my son who was injured in his eye to a nearby clinic
and it was 7:30 pm, but no body answered the door,” Moaed Al-Amari,
who lives in the posh Al-Mansour district, told IOL.
Famed
doctors in the country have cut it short and left the country for
good.
Others
opted for the tranquil north in cities like As- Sulaimaniyah (375km
from Baghdad).
“A
friend of mine in As-Sulaimaniyah told me that clinics have been
mushrooming in the city over the past years thanks to security and
stability,” said Subhi, a shop owner.
Armed
Doctors
The
mayhem and insecurity forced some doctors to carry weapons to protect
themselves in a country where lawlessness and free-for-all looting
have become part of normal life.
“Criminals
often target doctors for money or to punish them, particularly
surgeons, for failing to treat a relative,” said a Baghdad doctor
who requested anonymity.
Spokesman
for the health ministry, Qasim Allawi, said the government has allowed
doctors and scientists to carry weapons to defend themselves.
He
said an ad hoc ministerial committee has decided to set up special
squads to provide basic protection for them.
Allawi
further said that police patrols will be deployed to protect some 40
clinics and medical centers in Baghdad.
The
ministry launched last month a nationwide media campaign to sound the
alarms over the doctor killings phenomenon.
British
medical charity Medact has warned that the health of the Iraqi people
has deteriorated since the 2003 invasion.
It
said one in four people in
Iraq
still depends on food aid and more children are underweight or
chronically malnourished than in 2000.