December 21, 2007
A MSF health worker treats a child in Injaram camp in Chhattisgarh state. India 2007 © Erwin Vantland/MSF In the heart of India, clashes between Naxalites—the local Maoists—and the Indian government have displaced tens of thousands of people. The fighting, which affects large swaths of Chhattisgarh state, flared up in 2005, and since then an estimated 56,000 civilians caught in the conflict have been forced to move to government-run camps. Thousands of others are hiding in the dense forest in the south of the state in Naxalite-controlled areas, or have taken refuge in settlements for the displaced near villages across the state border. Living in fear, they are left destitute and have difficulty accessing health care. MSF is among the very few humanitarian organizations that are supporting these people, and is striving to provide medical assistance on both sides of the conflict.
“Everyone needs to accept that we are not taking sides in this conflict. We provide health care to all victims whatever side they’re on and we need to have unhindered access to all those who are affected.” —MSF Field Coordinator Robert Rowies Communicating neutrality
MSF staff measures a child at Injaram camp to help determine if he is malnourished during a visit by MSF’s mobile therapeutic feeding program. India 2007 © Erwin Vantland/MSF Nutritional care in the camps With its red-brick roofs and 3,000 inhabitants, Injaram looks more like a village under construction than a displaced camp. MSF has been running a therapeutic feeding program here since November 2006. Children enrolled in the program come every week to have their weight checked or to receive consultations for basic health problems. The peanut-based food used in the nutritional programs has sometimes posed problems. “If the children have diarrhea they tend to stop taking it,” says health promoter Parvez Pasha, who visits the families each week to make sure the therapeutic food is taken properly. “Parents often leave in the morning to go working on road works around the camps and leave their children unattended.” Reaching those who are hiding "Our work at the border indicates that more medical assistance is needed deeper —MSF Field Coordinator Robert Rowies The queue can be long. MSF doctors see on average 50 to 60 patients a day. Most of them come for rashes, scabies, malaria, and malnutrition. “This morning, I saw a child who was nearly disabled. His scabies was so bad, he could hardly use his hands,” says MSF doctor Jorund Aswall, who supervises the team. Currently, MSF is able to work in the camps, as well as along the border with Andhra Pradesh and in other areas of Chhattisgarh. "Our work at the border indicates that more medical assistance is needed deeper in the forest where more people are hiding," says Robert Rowies. "We hope we will soon have access to all those affected by this conflict." |
© 2013 Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF)
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