The Columbus Dispatch

Doctor warns against coming to Poland

Says his hospital gets 2 to 5 migrants a day requiring treatment

- Vanessa Gera

“We must teach young people that the illegal way is not a good way. If you have an education, look for a job,

BIELSK PODLASKI, Poland – Dr. Arsalan Azzaddin was seeing migrants from Iraq and Syria being brought into a hospital in eastern Poland every day with hypothermi­a, pneumonia, broken bones and severe dehydratio­n. So he asked a Kurdish TV channel to let him go on the news to warn people in his homeland not to attempt the dangerous journey into the European Union through the Belarus-poland border.

“I want them not to come. They could die,” Azzaddin told The Associated Press on Monday.

At first, the medical director of the Bielsk Podlaski hospital was accused by some viewers of doing the bidding of the Polish government, which has taken a hard line in seeking to keep out migrants, using razor wire and a show of border police and military to stop attempts to sneak across the EU’S eastern border.

So he returned again to Kurdish TV, this time letting his patients describe their suffering from their hospital beds.

And he also had a message for the Iraqi leaders: “Save those people,” he said. “Kurds don’t deserve something like this.”

Only days later, the Iraqi government began taking steps to stop the migration of Iraqis, many of them Kurds, to Belarus. They halted flights to Belarus, closed offices that issued travel visas to Belarus and sent government planes to bring stranded people there back home.

EU officials also mounted pressure on Iraq to halt the migration, but Azzaddin is convinced that his appeals on TV, which he said reached 2.5 million viewers, played a significant role.

Azzaddin, originally from Irbil in the Kurdistan region of Iraq, has lived in Poland for 40 years. His hospital in Bielsk Podlaski, a town of 25,000, is located 20 miles from the border with Belarus, which migrants and refugees, mostly from the Middle East, have been trying to cross since the summer in hopes of

do it legally . ... Coming here by risking the death of your family and children is not a good way.”

Dr. Arsalan Azzaddin

finding better lives in the EU.

The EU accuses the authoritar­ian leader of Belarus, Alexander Lukashenko, of orchestrat­ing the migration in retaliatio­n for sanctions imposed on Belarus over an presidenti­al election in 2020 that was widely viewed as rigged and a harsh government crackdown on peaceful protesters.

Most of the migrants seek to reach Germany or elsewhere in Western Europe. But after 1 million refugees came to the EU in 2015, the bloc has sought to keep out any large new groups of asylum-seekers. The way it has done so, tacitly allowing the pushbacks of migrants and outsourcin­g migration control to Libya and Turkey, has prompted rights groups to accuse the EU of abetting human rights abuses.

With Poland’s border increasing­ly sealed, it has gotten harder and harder for migrants at the border. Many are getting trapped in a dank forest of bogs that sees subfreezin­g temperatur­es at night. There have been reports of at least a dozen deaths along the border, and Azzaddin believes there are more on the Belarus side, based on his monitoring of

social media posts.

With flights to Belarus from the Mideast coming to a halt, Azzaddin says he believes there are no more migrants in Poland’s forest but there are still 2,000 people on the Belarusian side.

Azzaddin said his hospital had lately been receiving two to five migrants a day needing urgent medical treatment. One was a Syrian woman who suffered a miscarriag­e after being stuck in the forest for 22 days. When she was finally taken to the hospital, she caught COVID-19. The woman, a 38-year-old from Aleppo, was escorted away from the hospital on Monday by Border Guard officers who would not let AP journalist­s speak to her.

Azzaddin supports the strict Polish approach to migration. He says if Poland were to allow in all the people that Belarus was shepherdin­g to the EU’S doorstep, the numbers would only grow and Lukashenko would prevail in his geopolitic­al standoff against the West.

The problem, he says, should be addressed at its roots. He sharply accuses Iraqi authoritie­s of failing to create conditions where people can have dignified lives.

“You have to ask why people are coming,” he said. “The leaders of many countries, of the United States and the European Union, must ask the Iraqi authoritie­s why people are fleeing. These are educated people. They don’t have work, they don’t have anything to survive on.”

He supports immigratio­n, but wants to see it happen in a legal, controlled way.

“We must teach young people that the illegal way is not a good way. If you have an education, look for a job, do it legally,” he said. “I am the medical director of this hospital. If 20 doctors wanted to work here, I could give them work tomorrow. But they must fulfill certain requiremen­ts. Coming here by risking the death of your family and children is not a good way.”

 ?? CZAREK SOKOLOWSKI/AP ?? Dr. Arsalan Azzaddin, originally from the Kurdistan region of Iraq, Azzaddin has been treating Iraqi and Syrian migrants who have entered Poland from Belarus and gotten trapped in a dank forest, and often arrive with hypothermi­a, pneumonia, broken bones and severe dehydratio­n.
CZAREK SOKOLOWSKI/AP Dr. Arsalan Azzaddin, originally from the Kurdistan region of Iraq, Azzaddin has been treating Iraqi and Syrian migrants who have entered Poland from Belarus and gotten trapped in a dank forest, and often arrive with hypothermi­a, pneumonia, broken bones and severe dehydratio­n.
 ?? CZAREK SOKOLOWSKI/AP ?? Polish Border Guard officers escort a Syrian woman from a hospital in Bielsk Podlaski, Poland.
CZAREK SOKOLOWSKI/AP Polish Border Guard officers escort a Syrian woman from a hospital in Bielsk Podlaski, Poland.

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