The Fiji Times

Afghan hospital wards fill with children suffering from pneumonia

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KABUL - In a bitterly cold bedroom at the start of winter in Kabul, 22-year Maryam sat with her baby son bundled up in a red jumper as he coughed days after being discharged for the third time from a hospital ward for suspected pneumonia.

Every time 10-month old Rahmat’s parents bring him home from the crowded, but warmer hospital, they say he gets sick again. The parents said they spend whatever they can from their shrinking income to trying to heat the room, which drops below freezing at night.

“I am scared, it is only the beginning of winter, what is going to happen?” said Maryam, saying the family could only buy coal in small quantities and had to cut back on food to afford even that after her husband lost his constructi­on job.

The family is among many in Afghanista­n unable to afford adequate heating, often having to choose between food and fuel as an economic crisis grips the country.

Doctors and aid workers say thousands of children are being admitted to hospital with pneumonia and other respirator­y diseases caused by the cold and malnutriti­on.

The crisis, aid agencies say, is likely to get worse. A ban on female NGO workers has led to over 180 internatio­nal organisati­ons suspending operations in the crucial winter months, saying they are unable to operate in the conservati­ve country without female staff to reach out to women and children.

Even before that, more than half the population was reliant on humanitari­an aid after the economic shock precipitat­ed by the 2021 Taliban takeover caused Afghanista­n’s GDP to shrink by 20 per cent last year.

Afghanista­n has been hit by a cut in developmen­t spending by foreign government­s, an enforcemen­t of Western sanctions and the freezing of the country’s central bank assets that has severely hampered the banking system.

 ?? Picture: REUTERS/Ali Khara ?? Mohammad, 2 months old, receives treatment in the intensive care unit of a hospital
in Kabul, Afghanista­n.
Picture: REUTERS/Ali Khara Mohammad, 2 months old, receives treatment in the intensive care unit of a hospital in Kabul, Afghanista­n.

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