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News Features - Iraq Report
Children with serious
illnesses abandoned
Nine-year-old Faleh
Muhammad was abandoned
by his family in April 2006.
He was left to fend for
himself in the streets of
Baghdad, and later he was
diagnosed with leukaemia,
reports IRIN News.
“I miss my mother… in
the last days before they left
me, she was very sad. One
day I woke up in the
morning to find my father
and mother had disappeared,” Faleh said.
“We were living in an
abandoned building near
Hay Jamia’a District with
three other families. I asked
them about my parents and
they told me they had left.
So I had to work to be able
to eat because those families
couldn’t feed me,” he said. Faleh said he started
begging in the streets of
Baghdad and one day he
had a serious headache and
fainted. Helped by passersby,
he was taken to Yarmouk
hospital and after two days
diagnosed with leukaemia.
“I remember my father
saying I was useless because
I was rotten from the inside
and I never understood why,
but now I know that the
reason for abandoning me
was my disease,” Faleh said,
adding that his father was
poor and could not afford
the treatment.
Faleh, who is now
receiving treatment, is being
looked after by a local nongovernmental
organisation
(NGO) Keeping Children
Alive (KCA), which estimates
that in Baghdad alone
over 700 children have been
abandoned by their families
since January 2006.
However, the KCA lacks the
resources to help him to get
proper treatment.
“The problem is even
more serious among newborn
babies and there are
many cases of children aged
1-12 abandoned,” said
Mayada Marouf, a
spokesperson for KCA.
“Most of them have a lifethreatening
disease and
their families cannot afford
treatment.”
Long-term effects
“All children whose parents
have left them are suffering
from serious psychological
disorders, and the youngest
urgently need a family to
take care of them,” Marouf
said.
“Poverty and violence
have also forced parents to
abandon a son to save the
lives of their other children.”
Specialists said the
greatest concern is the longterm
effect on an entire
generation: the trauma of
what is happening to those
children is enormous.
“Abandoned children
carry long-term psychological
effects. There is a strong
possibility that they could
change their behaviour after
feeling ostracised,” Dr
Ibrahim Abdel-Rahman, a
psychiatrist at the Iraqi Aid
Association (IAA), another
NGO, said.
The KCA has a
department that works with
vulnerable children. It also
has three psychologists –
two from Jordan and one
from the United Arab
Emirates.
“In some cases they keep
to themselves and don’t
want to speak to professionals
or any other person.
They feel they are on their
own although there are
people who want to help
them,” Dr Abdel-Rahman
said.
Iraqi Red Crescent
The Iraqi Red Crescent (IRC)
told IRIN the rise in the
number of abandoned children
was alarming, the
result of sectarian violence
and drastic socio-economic
problems.
An IRC employee, who
preferred anonymity, told IRIN many parents leave
their children with relatives
who already have more than
20 children to look after and
are later abandoned or
forced to work in the streets
to supplement the household
income. It is not
uncommon to see a house
teaming with children.
More than 1.6 million
children under the age of 12
have become homeless in
Iraq, according to the
country’s Ministry of Labour
and Social Affairs. That’s
almost 70% of the estimated
2.5 million Iraqis who are
homeless inside the country.
“There are no reliable estimates
of how many orphans
and abandoned children are
in Iraq today but we believe,
according to some data
collected by local NGOs,
that more than 8,000 children
are in the same or a
similar situation to that of Faleh,” Mayada said.
Date
of upload: 22nd Jan 2008
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