240 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
240 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
Via NY Transfer News Collective * All the News that Doesn't Fit
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DOCTORS OF THE WORLD OBSERVER REPORTS BACK FROM CHIAPAS
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by Toby Mailman
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for NY Transfer
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February 10, 1994
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Ramona Bailly, a pediatrician and a member of Doctors of the
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World (DOW), a New York-based, non-profit human rights
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organization, travelled from January 15 - 26 through Chiapas,
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Mexico as an observer representing DOW, mainly to see what the
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status of health care for the people in the region was after the
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military intervention following the uprising on January 1 by the
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Zapatista National Liberation Army (EZLN). In a talk given on
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February 9 at the offices of Doctors of the World Dr. Bailly
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reported on some of the human rights abuses she saw or heard about,
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in addition to the lack and even prevention of medical care.
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Dr. Bailly was told by residents one of the areas she visited
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that some 300 bodies were brought to a fair grounds run by the
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military. Forty-eight bodies were autopsied and buried in a
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paupers' cemetery without being identified. By Mexican law, photos
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are supposed to be taken before, during and after the autopsies,
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and the photos and fingerprints of the bodies are supposed to be
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made public, so that they can be identified. The Government
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refused to make the information public. The fates of the remaining
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252 bodies was unknown, and hundreds of families may never know
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what happened to family members who have disappeared. Reporters
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who were able to get a look at the bodies gathered at the fair
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grounds said they were all definitely indigenous people. The
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assumption is that they were executed by the military and that
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these executions are being covered up by the government.
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In a cemetery next to a hospital which had been occupied by
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the military for ten days a number of bodies had been quickly
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buried, and not by family members. They were dug up by the
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government Attorney General's Office and given autopsies.
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Independent international observers were not allowed to watch the
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autopsies. Dr. Bailly for some reason was not stopped as she
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walked around the cemetery, where she was able to observe bullets
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being removed from the backs of some of the bodies. Her lack of
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training in that field, however, prevented her to make further
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observations. She described the members of the Attorney General's
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office who were performing the autopsies as "the bad guys," and
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said the people truly feared them.
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Observing the situation of refugees in Mexico, Dr. Bailly said
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the Guatemalan refugees, who are for the most part being cared for
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under the auspices of the U.N., were doing alright. However,
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Mexican refugees who were displaced for a variety of reasons
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following the January uprisings, including military bombings, and
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who were being cared for by the military and the Mexican Red Cross,
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did not far as well. In one refugee site which held about 300
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people military doctors were giving examinations in public, sure to
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have their military photographers on hand. The three military
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doctors said they did not need any assistance from the oberving
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foreign doctors. At another refugee site organized by a farm
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cooperative, which also held 300 people, conditions were much
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better. Committees were organized to see to people's needs, and
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there was even a recreation area for children.
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In Ocosingo the military was seen distributing food, or shoes,
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or clothing. However, the recipients were all Mestizos, none of
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them were indigenous people. In order to get the food the people
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needed to show identification, which is bureaucratically almost
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impossible to obtain.
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Witnesses told Dr. Bailly that in one rural town the military
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harassed the population. In another 33 people were tortured and
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taken away. The residents were told to stay in their homes or they
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would be bombed.
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Although the official death toll during the uprising and
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military repression is in the hundreds, testimony from people
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living in Chiapas indicates that during a ten-day period when no
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outsiders were allowed to enter the area, deaths in Chiapas at the
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hands of the military really reached the thousands.
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On January 2 a hospital in Ocosingo was closed down by the
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military for 10 days. According to reports from patients in the
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hospital, all male visitors were shot or disappeared by the
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military, allegedly suspected of being members of the EZLN. On
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January 3 a guard at an archaeological site was shot in the chest
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and the military would not allow him to obtain medical attention.
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He died after three days.
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In the town of Altamirano the only medical attention the
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indigenous people get is from the small, St. Vincent de Paul-run
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San Carlos Hospital. Personnel at the hospital, including nine
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doctors, have in the past received death threats and it has long
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been suspected by the government of supporting insurgency because
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it serves the indigenous population. It has been made clear that
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the hospital will serve anyone who needs the care, but, according
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to Dr. Bailly, the non-indigenous townspeople do not want to
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receive medical treatment at the same place the indigenous people
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receive their treatment, since that would mean they would be
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treated as equals.
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When the military came into the area after the EZLN they
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patrolled the San Carlos Hospital wards, and harassed and
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threatened the staff. The head lab technician was tortured and
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taken to Tuxtla. Fortunately a lawyer was able to get him released
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eventually.
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Patients were not allowed by the military to enter the
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hospital. The hospital normally runs a very good community
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outreach health care program, going into the rural indigenous
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communities. The military would not allow the nuns who work at the
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hospital to continue their work in the communities.
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With the presence of foreigners the situation has improved
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somewhat. Mdecins du Monde has sent a doctor to work in the San
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Carlos Hospital for six months, and Doctors of the World has sent
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a doctor for 3 months, who sends back regular reports. After 3
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months the situation will be reassessed.
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Meanwhile, there are thousands of people displaced by the
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military intervention who are in precarious condition. The
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question that no one can answer now is what will happen to them
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when they go back to their homes.
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At any time during the next six months, until the end of June,
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Mexico has the option to pull out of the North American Free Trade
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Agreement (NAFTA). It is not clear what effect this may have on
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the government and the military's treatment of the indigenous
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people in Chiapas, or on other peoples in Mexico as the new spirit
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of rebellion and demand for change spreads.
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# # #
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE - February 8, 1994
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CONTACT: Dr. Ramona Bailly
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Member, Executive Committee
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Board of Directors
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Doctors of the World
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Steven Segal
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Executive Director
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Doctors of the World
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(212)529-1556
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(212)529-1571 (Fax)
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ESSENTIAL HEALTH SERVICES JEOPARDIZED BY STRIFE IN CHIAPAS, MEXICO.
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INTIMIDATION AND ISOLATION LEAVE INDIGENOUS PEOPLES FEARFUL OF
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SEEKING NEEDED CARE. DOCTORS OF THE WORLD PLACES AMERICAN
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PHYSICIAN IN ALTAMIRANO HOSPITAL.
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Unremarked in much of the reporting about the Zapatista revolt
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in Chiapas, Mexico, is the effect of the Government's response to
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the uprising on the availability and delivery of medical services
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to the region's population. A fact-finding mission conducted
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jointly by Doctors of the World (DOW), a New York-based non-profit
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international human rights organization, and Mdecins du Monde
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(MDM), DOW's French counterpart, documented intimidation and
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isolation that still prohibits people form seeking and receiving
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health care. Further, systemic, gross inadequacies surfaced in
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both the level of health care services and the delivery channels
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for those services.
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Representing DOW on the mission was Ramona Bailly, MD, MPH,
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Pediatric Emergency Room attending physician at Bronx Lebanon
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Hospital, Bronx, New York. Bailly spoke with victims and witnesses
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of violence, Zapatistas and health care providers in San Crist"bal
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de las Casas, Altamirano, Ocosingo and the countryside. The
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mission established its base at San Carlos Hospital, serving
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Altamirano, a municipality of 60,000 people living in 600
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communities in the mountainous area southeast of San Crist"bal de
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las Casas. Reports confirmed Mexican Armed Forces (MAF) human
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rights abuses, targeting particularly the indigenous population.
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Since the outbreak of the revolt, delivery of health services
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at San Carlos Hospital and within the pueblos [small towns] has
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been seriously disrupted.
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- Of the hospital's nine doctors, all Altamirano locals, seven
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have fled in fear.
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- Deliveries of fuel and other supplies often were stopped.
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Hospital staff were routinely intercepted when attempting to
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maintain the facility's water supply or gather wood for cooking.
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- The hospital was not included in the MAF's water delivery to
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Altamirano inhabitants prior to the arrival of international human
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rights representatives.
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At the request of the Sisters of St. Vincent at San Carlos
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Hospital, and responding to the state of medical urgency witnessed
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by the mission, on 1 February DOW placed a volunteer American
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physician - Glen Fennelly, Pediatric Infectious Diseases Fellow at
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the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New York - at San
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Carlos Hospital, Altamirano. Dr. Fennelly joins Dr. Marie Soulard,
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an MDM volunteer; both work at the hospital and conduct
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consultations in surrounding villages. Their presence, with others
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on site as observers, is considered essential to allow continuity
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in providing medical services and offering some protection for
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local health workers. The doctors are seeing approximately 100
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people each day.
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Since the cease-fire, the Government Secretariat of Health has
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dispatched teams in the jungle, fully equipped with vaccines,
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various antibiotics and other necessary materials as well as
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vehicles suited for travel into the countryside. Fennelly and
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Soulard have been readily accepted as members of the medical teams
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making daily forays. While this Government action is welcome -
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even necessary to gain access for the expatriates in some villages
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- it has been sporadic. After arriving in Altamirano on 27
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January, they abruptly left on 2 February without explanation. As
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unexpectedly, Government Department of Health teams returned three
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days later and resumed work in tandem with the DOW and MDM doctors
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without comment.
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Regarding medicines an medical supplies, Bailly highlighted
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the hospital's desperate need for these items in her mission diary.
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Fennelly also observes that availability of mediation and supplies
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seem to be tied to the presence of Government Secretariat of Health
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staff. There is great concern for regular, dependable delivery of
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an adequate quantity of these essential supplies.
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Fennelly's 5 February report from the field:
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- While there has been no sign of true emergencies, there is
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a tremendous disease burden, including tuberculosis, parasitosis
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and malnutrition. Evidence of a woefully inadequate health care
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delivery system is everywhere.
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- People in most of the villages visited hadn't had contact
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with any health care workers since the end of December. Several
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local health care promoters have fled.
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- Members of the Government teams are encouraging people to
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visit the hospital; nonetheless, there is still tremendous fear of
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travelling to San Carlos hospital. At the hospital, where the
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usual patient population averaged 55 before the MAF began its
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patrols, ten count is now fewer than twenty. Typically busy out-
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patient clinics are quite.
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- Additional international personnel have arrived in
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Altamirano, primarily as observers. Coincidentally, two
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supervisors from the Government teams visited the evening of 4
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February, giving every sign of welcoming the expatriates.
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Doctors of the World and Mdecins du Monde plan to maintain
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their services - and physical presence - Chiapas through April.
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Doctors of the World-US is a non-sectarian medical relief
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organization operating worldwide, with headquarters in New York
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City. DOW is the autonomous affiliate of Mdecins du Monde, Paris,
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which currently has more than six hundred health professionals in
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field assignments in forty countries. DOW has developed, staffed
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and funded programs around the world, including Kosovo, the former
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Yugoslavial; Moraz n, El Salvador; St. Petersburg, Russia, and in
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the streets of New York City.
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# # #
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