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February 2007 |
Early in the morning of January 24th, heavy fighting erupted
between UN Stabilisation Mission in Haiti troops (MINUSTAH) and local
armed groups in the Haitian capital’s slum of Cité Soleil.
In the following 48 hours, the St. Catherine hospital supported by Médecins
Sans Frontières (MSF), received 17 people with gunshots wounds.
Among them were six women and a 5-year-old child. A woman was wounded
by tear gas.
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| © Pep Bonet |
“A woman who was wounded by gunshot
arrived at the hospital in a desperate condition. She was immediately
transferred to the operation theatre, but unfortunately she did not
survive”, says Fabio
Pompetti, Head of Mission for the MSF program in Cité Soleil. “Once
again the situation has deteriorated in this area of Port-au-Prince
and the population finds itself trapped in a wave of violence
and insecurity”.
Cité Soleil is a deprived slum of Port-au-Prince where an estimated
200,000 people live in poverty and violence. In August 2005, MSF rehabilitated
the only two health structures in the slum: the St. Catherine Hospital
and the primary health centre of Chapi, both located in the heart of
the slum. When MSF decided to start the intervention both structures
had literally been abandoned because of insecurity.
“We reopened the St. Catherine Hospital in August 2005 and
thanks to our committed Haitian staff we’ve never interrupted
our around the clock activities. When heavy fighting erupts here the
population of Cité Soleil face a war-like situation” continues
Pompetti. “The medical team immediately activates the emergency
plan. At the entrance of the hospital patients go through a first medical
screening and those in need are sent directly to the two operations
theatres functioning inside the hospital.”
Since last December, the situation in Cité Soleil has become
more and more volatile with clashes erupting regularly between armed
groups and UN troops. Civilians are often caught in the cross-fire and
they are not even safe in their homes.
“A few weeks ago I was at home with my son when a stray bullet
entered the house and hit me in the abdomen”, says
a 22-year-old patient hospitalised in St. Catherine. “I was
immediately taken to the hospital here. That day there were many
wounded with me. The doctors transferred me to the operation
theatre. I was six months pregnant. I survived but my baby
died.”
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| © Pep Bonet |
In front of this woman is a 14-year-old boy who is assisted by his mother.
His neck is completely patched and he can hardly breathe. “He
was sitting at home with me and we were eating”, explains
his mum. “Then a bullet hit him in the neck. He has already
been operated twice he has been in hospital for more than a month now.”
In the last three days no more fighting has been reported inside Cité Soleil.
However the situation remains extremely tense.
In St. Catherine hospital, in addition to emergency care to victims
of violence MSF also runs the paediatric, medicine and maternity ward
with an average of 450 patients hospitalized, 1,500 consultations and
200 deliveries every month.
In Port-au-Prince, outside Cité Soleil, MSF runs other health
facilities. In La Trinité hospital in addition to trauma
care and post-surgical rehabilitation, MSF offers specific care of psychological
violence-related trauma. At the Jude Anne Hospital, MSF assists an average
of 1,300 deliveries per months. Since June 2006 the Jude Anne hospital
has also a program to prevent mother to child transmission of HIV.
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