Times of Suriname

Violence mounts against Iraqi doctors as COVID cases spike

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NAJAF, Iraq (Reuters) - Iraqi doctor Tariq AlSheibani remembers little else beyond cowering on the ground as a dozen relatives of a patient, who had just died of COVID19, beat him unconsciou­s. About two hours later the 47-year-old director of AlAmal Hospital in the southern city of Najaf woke up in a different clinic with bruises all over his body.

“All the doctors are scared,” said Sheibani, speaking at his home in Kufa a few weeks after the Aug. 28 attack. “Every time a patient dies, we all hold our breath.” He is one of many doctors struggling to do their job as COVID-19 cases rise sharply in Iraq.

They are working within a health service that has been left to decay through years of civil conflict and underfundi­ng, and now face the added threat of physical attack by grieving and desperate families.

Reuters spoke to seven doctors, including the head of Iraq’s Medical Associatio­n, who described a growing pattern of assaults on medical staff. Dozens have taken place since the COVID-19 pandemic began. Meanwhile, the United Nations has warned that the pandemic could spiral out of control in Iraq. Authoritie­s have lifted many lockdown measures, allowing restaurant­s and places of worship to reopen, but they have shut borders to pilgrims ahead of a large Shi’ite Muslim pilgrimage that normally draws millions to the south of the country. Iraq has recorded several thousand new coronaviru­s infections every day, and the total now exceeds 300,000. More than 8,000 people have died, a number that some doctors fear will rise sharply, putting frontline healthcare workers under huge pressure and in some cases in physical danger. The health ministry did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment on the COVID situation in Iraq and medics’ complaints about the threat of violence. (Reuters)

 ??  ?? Patients suffering from the coronaviru­s disease (COVID19) are seen at AlAmal Hospital, in Najaf, Iraq September 13, 2020. (Photo:Reuters)
Patients suffering from the coronaviru­s disease (COVID19) are seen at AlAmal Hospital, in Najaf, Iraq September 13, 2020. (Photo:Reuters)

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