Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

World

Children die of malnutrition in northern Argentina

-

In parched and dusty villages in northern Argentina, children have been dying of hunger and disease linked to a lack of clean water and nutrition, despite living in one of Latin America's richest economies.

Community leaders say that since January, eight children have died of malnutrition in an isolated indigenous area in northwestern Salta province, the country's poorest.

For Valerio Cobos, chief of the Wichi community that is losing its children, his people's extreme poverty is the result of white repression of indigenous people during the last century.

Children have been dying of hunger and diseases related to a lack of clean water and nutrition in no...
Children have been dying of hunger and diseases related to a lack of clean water and nutrition in northern Argentina
Ronaldo SCHEMIDT, AFP

"For the whites, we are less than rubbish," he told AFP.

Cobos said that eight children had died of hunger and two others from health problems associated with a lack of clean water and food in his scattered community.

Cobos is leader of around 50 families living on the outskirts of Embarcacion, a northern town built on lands the Wichis claim as theirs.

The spate of child deaths has prompted the local government to declare a health emergency and pledge to improve water treatment and supply in the region.

A woman takes water from a well in Mision Chaquena  near the town of Embarcacion in Argentina's...
A woman takes water from a well in Mision Chaquena, near the town of Embarcacion in Argentina's northern Salta province
Ronaldo SCHEMIDT, AFP

A complicating factor is that many of the community's women only speak the Wichi language and avoid going to health centers or hospitals where there are no interpreters.

- No clean water -

Indigenous Wichi woman Rosalia Gomez breastfeeds her son at their house in the indigenous community ...
Indigenous Wichi woman Rosalia Gomez breastfeeds her son at their house in the indigenous community of Santa Victoria Este in Salta province
Ronaldo SCHEMIDT, AFP

In a hospital on Argentina's border with Brazil and Paraguay, a five-year old girl died recently in the arms of visiting state health minister Josefina Medrano.

“I am a pediatrician, I trained to take care and ensure the health of children. It is a desperate situation," the minister told local newspapers following the child's death.

Armed with such raw experience, Medrano has promised to work to improve the lives of Wichis in the province, but conceded that it would take time.

Noelia Perez watches over her son at the Tartagal's hospital
Noelia Perez watches over her son at the Tartagal's hospital
Ronaldo SCHEMIDT, AFP

"This has been going on for many years in Salta. So far no government has remedied the situation."

Indigenous Argentines make up less than three percent of the country's population, with the majority living in Salta, most of them Wichi scattered in rural areas and surviving on the sale of coal and handicrafts.

Mision Chaquena, around 200 miles north of the city of Salta, is the largest Wichi community with about 8,000 inhabitants.

Rodolfo Franco, a doctor from Buenos Aires who runs its sole health center, says the situation is stark.

A child hospitalized for malnutrition lies in a hospital bed in Tartagal  Salta Province
A child hospitalized for malnutrition lies in a hospital bed in Tartagal, Salta Province
Ronaldo SCHEMIDT, AFP

"People are dying of hunger and thirst, of malnutrition, dehydration, lack of work and lack of a future," Franco told AFP.

His ramshackle hospital provides what little comfort it can, but lacks even the most basic equipment.

The bed used for maternity patients broke in half years ago and the midwife, Balbina Gutierrez, says she is hopeful of getting a replacement, but there are other priorities.

"We need sheets, the ones we have are very ragged," she said "And disinfectant!"

There is no ambulance. The nearest one is kept at another clinic 30 miles away by dirt road.

"There are no heaters or fans," said Franco. Nor is there time off: he is the only doctor.

A dog walks past a dwelling in the Wichi indigenous community of Mision Chaquena in Argentina's...
A dog walks past a dwelling in the Wichi indigenous community of Mision Chaquena in Argentina's northern Salta Province
Ronaldo SCHEMIDT, AFP

The more fortunate families in the poor community have electricity, but the simple homes have no running water. Outbreaks of diarrhea, vomiting and parasitic diseases are frequent. Dengue fever is a constant problem.

The village has a primary and a secondary school, but faced with extreme poverty, many children stop attending.

"The clothes! The shoes! If you don't have enough to eat, you can't!" said Elsa Rojas, an illiterate mother with two children.

- Drink or die -

Aerial view of the Wichi indigenous community of Mision Chaquena in Argentina's northern Salta ...
Aerial view of the Wichi indigenous community of Mision Chaquena in Argentina's northern Salta province
Ronaldo SCHEMIDT, AFP

In Mision Chaqueta, the Wichis store rainwater or take it from a pipe that provides running water for a few hours a day.

"The water comes out with red worms in it, sometimes it's yellow and leaves the containers black -- see?" says Maria, a local woman.

People use the pipe to fill up the containers -- plastic herbicide drums discarded by neighboring farmers, on whose irrigated lands grow tomatoes and peppers.

"We want good water to drink, to make a vegetable garden," says Rojas.

Worms and tiny insects flit across the surface of the water. Rojas scooped some up with an old food can, used the sleeve of her blouse as a filter, and drank.

A discolored container of drinking water seen layered with  insects and larvae in the indigenous com...
A discolored container of drinking water seen layered with insects and larvae in the indigenous community of Mision Chaquena, near the town of Embarcacion in Argentina's Salta province
Ronaldo SCHEMIDT, AFP

Local authorities have deployed water treatment units to ease the community's plight. A children's nutritional recovery center with 12 beds is operating in the area and the Red Cross has pledged assistance.

But in Mission Chaquena, people are still waiting for tangible signs of improvement.

Wichi teacher Rosa Rodríguez is worried about the lack of hope in the community.

"Since January, four teenagers committed suicide," she said. "We need young people to continue studying."

The most recent suicide was two weeks ago when a teenage boy hanged himself from a tree.

A container is being filled with water from a well in the Wichi indigenous community of Mision Chaqu...
A container is being filled with water from a well in the Wichi indigenous community of Mision Chaquena, where children have been dying of hunger and diseases related to a lack of clean water
Ronaldo SCHEMIDT, AFP

For Nora Segundo, Wichi community leader of the neighboring village of Carboncito, time is running out for a more hopeful future.

"How long are we going to wait and keep waiting and waiting. There are many dead kids. My four-year-old girl is malnourished. I don't know what to do."

In parched and dusty villages in northern Argentina, children have been dying of hunger and disease linked to a lack of clean water and nutrition, despite living in one of Latin America’s richest economies.

Community leaders say that since January, eight children have died of malnutrition in an isolated indigenous area in northwestern Salta province, the country’s poorest.

For Valerio Cobos, chief of the Wichi community that is losing its children, his people’s extreme poverty is the result of white repression of indigenous people during the last century.

Children have been dying of hunger and diseases related to a lack of clean water and nutrition in no...

Children have been dying of hunger and diseases related to a lack of clean water and nutrition in northern Argentina
Ronaldo SCHEMIDT, AFP

“For the whites, we are less than rubbish,” he told AFP.

Cobos said that eight children had died of hunger and two others from health problems associated with a lack of clean water and food in his scattered community.

Cobos is leader of around 50 families living on the outskirts of Embarcacion, a northern town built on lands the Wichis claim as theirs.

The spate of child deaths has prompted the local government to declare a health emergency and pledge to improve water treatment and supply in the region.

A woman takes water from a well in Mision Chaquena  near the town of Embarcacion in Argentina's...

A woman takes water from a well in Mision Chaquena, near the town of Embarcacion in Argentina's northern Salta province
Ronaldo SCHEMIDT, AFP

A complicating factor is that many of the community’s women only speak the Wichi language and avoid going to health centers or hospitals where there are no interpreters.

– No clean water –

Indigenous Wichi woman Rosalia Gomez breastfeeds her son at their house in the indigenous community ...

Indigenous Wichi woman Rosalia Gomez breastfeeds her son at their house in the indigenous community of Santa Victoria Este in Salta province
Ronaldo SCHEMIDT, AFP

In a hospital on Argentina’s border with Brazil and Paraguay, a five-year old girl died recently in the arms of visiting state health minister Josefina Medrano.

“I am a pediatrician, I trained to take care and ensure the health of children. It is a desperate situation,” the minister told local newspapers following the child’s death.

Armed with such raw experience, Medrano has promised to work to improve the lives of Wichis in the province, but conceded that it would take time.

Noelia Perez watches over her son at the Tartagal's hospital

Noelia Perez watches over her son at the Tartagal's hospital
Ronaldo SCHEMIDT, AFP

“This has been going on for many years in Salta. So far no government has remedied the situation.”

Indigenous Argentines make up less than three percent of the country’s population, with the majority living in Salta, most of them Wichi scattered in rural areas and surviving on the sale of coal and handicrafts.

Mision Chaquena, around 200 miles north of the city of Salta, is the largest Wichi community with about 8,000 inhabitants.

Rodolfo Franco, a doctor from Buenos Aires who runs its sole health center, says the situation is stark.

A child hospitalized for malnutrition lies in a hospital bed in Tartagal  Salta Province

A child hospitalized for malnutrition lies in a hospital bed in Tartagal, Salta Province
Ronaldo SCHEMIDT, AFP

“People are dying of hunger and thirst, of malnutrition, dehydration, lack of work and lack of a future,” Franco told AFP.

His ramshackle hospital provides what little comfort it can, but lacks even the most basic equipment.

The bed used for maternity patients broke in half years ago and the midwife, Balbina Gutierrez, says she is hopeful of getting a replacement, but there are other priorities.

“We need sheets, the ones we have are very ragged,” she said “And disinfectant!”

There is no ambulance. The nearest one is kept at another clinic 30 miles away by dirt road.

“There are no heaters or fans,” said Franco. Nor is there time off: he is the only doctor.

A dog walks past a dwelling in the Wichi indigenous community of Mision Chaquena in Argentina's...

A dog walks past a dwelling in the Wichi indigenous community of Mision Chaquena in Argentina's northern Salta Province
Ronaldo SCHEMIDT, AFP

The more fortunate families in the poor community have electricity, but the simple homes have no running water. Outbreaks of diarrhea, vomiting and parasitic diseases are frequent. Dengue fever is a constant problem.

The village has a primary and a secondary school, but faced with extreme poverty, many children stop attending.

“The clothes! The shoes! If you don’t have enough to eat, you can’t!” said Elsa Rojas, an illiterate mother with two children.

– Drink or die –

Aerial view of the Wichi indigenous community of Mision Chaquena in Argentina's northern Salta ...

Aerial view of the Wichi indigenous community of Mision Chaquena in Argentina's northern Salta province
Ronaldo SCHEMIDT, AFP

In Mision Chaqueta, the Wichis store rainwater or take it from a pipe that provides running water for a few hours a day.

“The water comes out with red worms in it, sometimes it’s yellow and leaves the containers black — see?” says Maria, a local woman.

People use the pipe to fill up the containers — plastic herbicide drums discarded by neighboring farmers, on whose irrigated lands grow tomatoes and peppers.

“We want good water to drink, to make a vegetable garden,” says Rojas.

Worms and tiny insects flit across the surface of the water. Rojas scooped some up with an old food can, used the sleeve of her blouse as a filter, and drank.

A discolored container of drinking water seen layered with  insects and larvae in the indigenous com...

A discolored container of drinking water seen layered with insects and larvae in the indigenous community of Mision Chaquena, near the town of Embarcacion in Argentina's Salta province
Ronaldo SCHEMIDT, AFP

Local authorities have deployed water treatment units to ease the community’s plight. A children’s nutritional recovery center with 12 beds is operating in the area and the Red Cross has pledged assistance.

But in Mission Chaquena, people are still waiting for tangible signs of improvement.

Wichi teacher Rosa Rodríguez is worried about the lack of hope in the community.

“Since January, four teenagers committed suicide,” she said. “We need young people to continue studying.”

The most recent suicide was two weeks ago when a teenage boy hanged himself from a tree.

A container is being filled with water from a well in the Wichi indigenous community of Mision Chaqu...

A container is being filled with water from a well in the Wichi indigenous community of Mision Chaquena, where children have been dying of hunger and diseases related to a lack of clean water
Ronaldo SCHEMIDT, AFP

For Nora Segundo, Wichi community leader of the neighboring village of Carboncito, time is running out for a more hopeful future.

“How long are we going to wait and keep waiting and waiting. There are many dead kids. My four-year-old girl is malnourished. I don’t know what to do.”

AFP
Written By

With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

You may also like:

World

Stop pretending to know what you’re talking about. You’re wrong and you know you’re wrong. So does everyone else.

Entertainment

Taylor Swift is primed to release her highly anticipated record "The Tortured Poets Department" on Friday.

Social Media

The US House of Representatives will again vote Saturday on a bill that would force TikTok to divest from Chinese parent company ByteDance.

Business

Two sons of the world's richest man Bernard Arnault on Thursday joined the board of LVMH after a shareholder vote.