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New field hospital treats hundreds of Rohingya refugees

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The eight-month-old Rohingya boy was close to death when he arrived at the field hospital in a Bangladesh refugee camp, his tiny lungs racked by pneumonia as he struggled to draw breath.

But he made it -- saved by doctors at a new Red Cross field hospital in Cox's Bazar, the largest clinic of its kind in the overcrowded camps stretching along the border with Myanmar.

"Had he come even an hour later, he would have no chance to survive," Peter Meyer, team leader at the 60-bed hospital the size of two football fields, told AFP.

For many Rohingya  the hospital staffed by foreign doctors and stocked with modern equipment is thei...
For many Rohingya, the hospital staffed by foreign doctors and stocked with modern equipment is their first encounter with medical services
Tauseef MUSTAFA, AFP

The infant, Mohammad Hares, is among the more than 600,000 refugees who have poured into Bangladesh since late August to escape ethnic violence in neighbouring Myanmar.

Many arrived sick, starving and nursing bullet wounds and landmine injuries, putting enormous pressure on the already overwhelmed medical clinics operating in camps near the border.

Red Cross doctors at the new hospital have been treating upwards of 200 patients a day, as exhausted Rohingya Muslims continue to cross into Bangladesh by land and sea, many in desperate need of treatment.

Exhausted Rohingya refugees continue to cross into Bangladesh by land and sea  many in desperate nee...
Exhausted Rohingya refugees continue to cross into Bangladesh by land and sea, many in desperate need of treatment like three-year-old Irfan
Tauseef MUSTAFA, AFP

"A lot of patients we've treated are weak and tired. There is a lot of exhaustion and dehydration due to long walks," said paediatric nurse Hildur Svenonsdottir at the clinic equipped with an operating theatre, maternity ward and isolation unit.

"There are patients who have not eaten for days," she added.

The threat of a serious disease outbreak stalks the densely populated camps, where hundreds of thousands of refugees live squeezed together in basic shanties lacking proper toilets.

Red Cross doctors at the new hospital have been treating upwards of 200 patients a day  including th...
Red Cross doctors at the new hospital have been treating upwards of 200 patients a day, including three-year-old Irfan
Tauseef MUSTAFA, AFP

Doctors fear a water-borne disease like cholera would wreak havoc in such conditions and thousands of patients -- especially children -- are already suffering from acute diarrhoea.

Meyer said the hospital was planning to send mobile teams deeper into the camps, where bamboo and plastic shanties -- perched on hillsides far from relief centres -- stretch for miles.

"What we have seen so far is only the tip of the iceberg," he said.

For many Rohingya, the new hospital staffed by foreign doctors and stocked with equipment is their first encounter with modern medicine.

The hospital is planning to send mobile teams deeper into the camps  where bamboo and plastic shanti...
The hospital is planning to send mobile teams deeper into the camps, where bamboo and plastic shanties -- perched on hillsides far from relief centres -- stretch for miles
Tauseef MUSTAFA, AFP

Healthcare is abysmal across the border in Rakhine, Buddhist-majority Myanmar's poorest state, where the Rohingya are denied citizenship and regarded as illegal migrants.

The persecuted Muslim minority have been largely deprived of proper medical care, and doctors say those arriving already show signs of serious malnutrition and other preventable illnesses.

"I have never seen such a hospital in my entire life," Mohammad's mother Halima Khatun told AFP.

"When we were sick, we only saw the local village healers."

Her young boy was saved by urgent surgery from a team of doctors who drained fluid from his lungs -- treatment unimaginable in her village back home.

The infant was "recovering fast", Meyer said, adding: "He is a great fighter."

The eight-month-old Rohingya boy was close to death when he arrived at the field hospital in a Bangladesh refugee camp, his tiny lungs racked by pneumonia as he struggled to draw breath.

But he made it — saved by doctors at a new Red Cross field hospital in Cox’s Bazar, the largest clinic of its kind in the overcrowded camps stretching along the border with Myanmar.

“Had he come even an hour later, he would have no chance to survive,” Peter Meyer, team leader at the 60-bed hospital the size of two football fields, told AFP.

For many Rohingya  the hospital staffed by foreign doctors and stocked with modern equipment is thei...

For many Rohingya, the hospital staffed by foreign doctors and stocked with modern equipment is their first encounter with medical services
Tauseef MUSTAFA, AFP

The infant, Mohammad Hares, is among the more than 600,000 refugees who have poured into Bangladesh since late August to escape ethnic violence in neighbouring Myanmar.

Many arrived sick, starving and nursing bullet wounds and landmine injuries, putting enormous pressure on the already overwhelmed medical clinics operating in camps near the border.

Red Cross doctors at the new hospital have been treating upwards of 200 patients a day, as exhausted Rohingya Muslims continue to cross into Bangladesh by land and sea, many in desperate need of treatment.

Exhausted Rohingya refugees continue to cross into Bangladesh by land and sea  many in desperate nee...

Exhausted Rohingya refugees continue to cross into Bangladesh by land and sea, many in desperate need of treatment like three-year-old Irfan
Tauseef MUSTAFA, AFP

“A lot of patients we’ve treated are weak and tired. There is a lot of exhaustion and dehydration due to long walks,” said paediatric nurse Hildur Svenonsdottir at the clinic equipped with an operating theatre, maternity ward and isolation unit.

“There are patients who have not eaten for days,” she added.

The threat of a serious disease outbreak stalks the densely populated camps, where hundreds of thousands of refugees live squeezed together in basic shanties lacking proper toilets.

Red Cross doctors at the new hospital have been treating upwards of 200 patients a day  including th...

Red Cross doctors at the new hospital have been treating upwards of 200 patients a day, including three-year-old Irfan
Tauseef MUSTAFA, AFP

Doctors fear a water-borne disease like cholera would wreak havoc in such conditions and thousands of patients — especially children — are already suffering from acute diarrhoea.

Meyer said the hospital was planning to send mobile teams deeper into the camps, where bamboo and plastic shanties — perched on hillsides far from relief centres — stretch for miles.

“What we have seen so far is only the tip of the iceberg,” he said.

For many Rohingya, the new hospital staffed by foreign doctors and stocked with equipment is their first encounter with modern medicine.

The hospital is planning to send mobile teams deeper into the camps  where bamboo and plastic shanti...

The hospital is planning to send mobile teams deeper into the camps, where bamboo and plastic shanties — perched on hillsides far from relief centres — stretch for miles
Tauseef MUSTAFA, AFP

Healthcare is abysmal across the border in Rakhine, Buddhist-majority Myanmar’s poorest state, where the Rohingya are denied citizenship and regarded as illegal migrants.

The persecuted Muslim minority have been largely deprived of proper medical care, and doctors say those arriving already show signs of serious malnutrition and other preventable illnesses.

“I have never seen such a hospital in my entire life,” Mohammad’s mother Halima Khatun told AFP.

“When we were sick, we only saw the local village healers.”

Her young boy was saved by urgent surgery from a team of doctors who drained fluid from his lungs — treatment unimaginable in her village back home.

The infant was “recovering fast”, Meyer said, adding: “He is a great fighter.”

AFP
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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.

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