Business World

As Marawi fighting grinds on, relief centers also confronted by fatalities

-

A FULL MONTH since fierce fighting broke out in the southern Philippine­s, some people who fled the battle are dying in overcrowde­d and unsanitary evacuation centers, health officials say.

At least 24 people have died in the centers since fighting between security forces and Islamist militants erupted in Marawi City, Health Secretary Paulyn Ubial told reporters.

Alinader Minalang, the Health director for the Lanao del Sur province which includes Marawi, said 300 cases of diarrhea had been recorded among the nearly 40,000 people huddled in emergency shelters set up in community halls, gymnasiums and Islamic schools. Many of those who died were elderly and had preexistin­g conditions, but at least two of the fatalities were due to diarrhea. “The cause of the increase in diarrhea cases is sanitation issues and a lack of sources of potable water.”

In the centers, families of up to a dozen people sleep together on concrete floors, and in some places hundreds are sharing a single toilet.

“My children are getting sick. One has diarrhea and another has an allergic reaction on his skin.... (T)he water we have to use here is not good,” said Tarhata Mostare, who was staying with more than 800 people in a high school hall in Iligan City, 40 km. from Marawi. She walked out of Marawi City along with thousands of others just hours after delivering her fifth child, and trekked for hours with the infant swaddled in cloth and her own traditiona­l malong, or long skirt, drenched in blood.

“We call him Martial Law,” she said, looking at her baby boy Sahir, his head now crowned with fine hair. On the date of Sahir’s birth, May 23, Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte declared martial law across the southern island of Mindanao, vowing to drive out the militants — an alliance of groups that have pledged allegiance to the Islamic State group.

The army says nearly 350 people have been killed in the fighting, including 257 militants, 62 soldiers and 26 civilians. Hundreds of people are unaccounte­d for, believed to be hiding in the basements of a city that has been pummeled by government air strikes.

The mostly Muslim evacuees are eager to return home by the weekend for Eid al-Fitr, the biggest festival of the year that marks the end of the holy month of Ramadan. But for many, their homes have been devastated by weeks of artillery fire and aerial bombardmen­t.

The army says it is nearing victory, but hostilitie­s will have to be followed by a lengthy cleanup operation — unearthing and disarming unexploded ordnance, and scouring for possible booby traps before residents can go home.

“I will be the happiest woman in the world if I am allowed to return,” said Salema Ampasong, 28, who was among about 1,000 evacuees given shelter in a gymnasium in the town of Balo-i, several miles outside Marawi. A fruit vendor, she said she had lost all her possession­s, “but I would still want to come home.”

In Balo-i, there’s just one working toilet for the center’s 1,025 residents. On the wall a poster produced by the Philippine Red Cross instructs evacuees how to wash their hands. There are no basins with taps, and evacuees wash — and even defecate — in a nearby river.

Malnutriti­on is another worry in the centers. Melia Sarap, the provincial nutritioni­st for Lanao del Sur, said initial surveys of more than 600 evacuees had found six cases of severe malnutriti­on and 20 cases of moderate malnutriti­on.

“The evacuation centers are very congested and the infection you can catch could result in malnutriti­on,” she said. “If we just depend on rations alone (the malnutriti­on rate) can rise up.”

Particular­ly of concern were lactating mothers, she said, for whom a nutritious diet is vital for both the mother’s health and the developmen­t of the child. “It’s not good to feed children just on canned goods like this,” said Tarhata, breastfeed­ing her baby. “But it’s the only way we can survive.” —

 ??  ?? SALIHA GUINAR, 23, with her newly born baby Norlaila, who gave birth three days after the fighting between government forces and insurgents from the Maute group, stays inside the evacuation center in Baloi Village, Lanao Del Norte, Philippine­s June 19.
SALIHA GUINAR, 23, with her newly born baby Norlaila, who gave birth three days after the fighting between government forces and insurgents from the Maute group, stays inside the evacuation center in Baloi Village, Lanao Del Norte, Philippine­s June 19.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines