from what i have read this is typical of the foreign aid programs which the u.s. government has to aid poor people in foreign countries. ie: the government rulers get large share of the loot and the poor people in need get next to nothing - the webmaster

from: http://www.azcentral.com/news/articles/0417war-relief17.html

Hospital staff gets water while patients go without
Robyn Dixon
Los Angeles Times
Apr. 17, 2003 12:00 AM

BASRA, Iraq - Well-fed and well-dressed, Dr. Saber Joda walked out of Basra General Hospital on Wednesday carrying home a large shopping bag filled with humanitarian aid sent from the United Arab Emirates.

The aid had been delivered to the hospital in this southern city for the first time since the war, and as Joda and other members of the staff hauled bags and boxes emblazoned with Red Crescent stickers, some were besieged by furious relatives of the sick.

Things like before

Abdur Hamad, 32, was seething.

"They distributed the aid only to the doctors and hospital staff. Sick people have no water to drink," he complained, gesticulating angrily. "Everything is as it was before, under Saddam Hussein. The food is going to people with high positions, and that's all."

Suddenly he spotted a hospital staffer laden with two shopping bags filled with milk, biscuits, water and other aid items.

"Look at her!" he shouted, then confronted her angrily. "Why do sick people have no water when you are taking it?"

'Only for staff'

"It's only for staff. I'm taking it home," responded Hayfa Lateef, 32. "They gave it to me. What should I do, throw it away?"

She said she had not been paid this month.

Saber, the director of general surgery at the hospital, said salaries had not been paid for three months. As a group of patients' relatives surrounded him in the parking lot, he handed his bag of Red Crescent biscuits to a colleague and shooed him away. Then the doctor planted his feet on the concrete and listed all the problems he and his staff face: The hospital was suffering severe shortages, including water, food, medicines and dressings.

"We have no clean water to sterilize our hands or equipment," he said. "Of course people are going to get infections. What do you expect?"

Lack of pay

He defended the decision to hand out bottled water and food to staff members, citing the lack of pay. Although he seemed a little nonplused when asked why needy patients didn't get the aid first, he recovered quickly, saying that was someone else's decision.

But the head of the hospital kitchen, Thaera Hashem, 42, hauling home a box of bottled water home on her shoulder, said it was Saber's decision. A group of staff members walking out with her agreed.

Inside, the hospital's wards were a chaotic picture of wrenching misery: People lay injured from allied bombing and artillery strikes on Basra and the surrounding area. None of them had been given Red Crescent milk, food or water.

Listless patients

"The plane came and attacked with bombs," said Nasera Farhan, 10. "It hurts a lot."

She recalled running in panic from the roof of their house in the village of Omara.

The wall collapsed and crushed her leg. Her mother, Fatima, standing barefoot by the bed, fanned the listless child. She buys tomatoes and vegetables for her and said she had to buy medicine as well.

She slapped her hands together in a dismissive gesture to express the hopelessness of efforts to get humanitarian aid for her child. She said she has to stand in line for water from Kuwait being distributed in tankers.

A young woman in a nearby bed began crying and moaning. Her family fluttered anxiously, and everyone cast looks of pained sympathy. Under her bed lay a bloodstained towel.

In another bed, Basem Faves, 15, had a gash in his stomach about a foot long. He said he had been shot in the stomach by a British tank.

"It was a big tank. I was standing outside my house, and suddenly I was shot. I fell down," he said. "At the time I didn't really feel anything."

His brother Habeeb, 33, said he and others had asked staff for aid and was told patients would get it the next day. But the aid had run out, he said.

In the next bed lay a frail boy named Abass Kadem, 13, with stomach and back injuries, hurt when artillery hit his house. He has had two operations, but his father, Harda Kadem, has been told they were not successful.

'Waiting for the food'

"We're waiting for the food aid that they promised," said Kadem, 52, referring to allied forces.

Zaidoon Dahoos, a surgeon, said that he had heard that some doctors were given aid but that he had not received any.

"It's supposed to be distributed to the sick people," he said. "There are always some bad people. They have a good chance to get something."


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