Tag Archives: horoscope
Capturing the plight of Syria’s refugees
Capturing the plight of Syria’s refugees Sarah Young / 23 June 2013 From an elderly woman forced to watch the murder of her husband, to the young man who suddenly finds himself a father of three — a new photography exhibition opening in Dubai this week hopes to open people’s eyes to the heartbreaking effects of civil war on the Syrian people. Victims of War, an exhibition featuring the work of Hermoine Macura, a Dubai-based Australian journalist who has worked in the Middle East for 12 years, will be on display at Pro Art Gallery from June 25. Macura said the non-political and non-governmental project, with its focus on highlighting humanitarian crises and suffering in Syria, was the hardest and most heart-breaking work she had done in the Middle East. The photos were taken in late December last year and early January, mainly at the Zaatari refugee camp in Jordan, near the town of Masraq about 30 to 50 kilometres from Syria, where thousands of refugees were arriving daily, she said. “Children with special needs, people in wheelchairs, people having to be carried over the border, elderly…like a swarm through the sandstorms…imagine a sandstorm in Dubai times ten. You could barely see. “Some women were giving birth on the border with no medical care.” But what troubled her the most were the sexual and gender-based crimes against women. “Some women were tortured and raped with animals and rodents. Girls as young as 10, 11, 12 raped, tortured and mutilated. I have never seen such extreme cases of torture like this in the Middle East, even when I was in Iraq. Humanitarian organisations had to bring in psychologists and counsellors to deal with the trauma, she said. “The cultural shame and embarrassment attracted to (rape) made it very difficult for people to seek medical treatment…many were suffering in silence. “As an outsider it was just shocking. We don’t get to see how people really suffer. We get desensitised, and there’s nothing focused on highlighting this. It took a long time to digest what she had seen. “Every single person stays in my eyes, heart and mind. “When you see things like this, it makes you more sensitive to choosing diplomatic solutions over war…everyone is so quick to take that option (of war), especially when you live in priviledged societies where you’re safe and secure, but they don’t realise the consequences, the damage on generations of people and how it affects society as a whole. While those living in the UAE were blessed, people living in other parts of the Arab world were not. “I really don’t know what will happen to them. If you look at Iraq before the Gulf War, it was a very rich country, and if you go there now the Iraqi people are in poverty. A lot of women are turning to prostitution.” Eighty per cent of the refugees she saw were women and children. “In any situation of lawlessness, the women and children are going to suffer the most. “When you break the woman you break the society. She’s raising the children, holding everyone and the community together.” While she saw very few men, she could vividly recall one who had adopted the children of his two brothers who had been killed, and taken them across the border. “This was a single, unmarried man who was now a father of three children at 25 years old. He took these kids across the border and is now in a camp trying to plan or work out how do you move on from this.” Another face which stuck with her was that of a woman in her 80s. “Gangs came to her house. They killed her husband and burnt her house to the ground in front of her. She has nothing. She came across that border by herself. It was unusual to see elderly people being attacked in the Middle East, she said. “People work their whole lives for their home. Now she’s got nothing. She said ‘I can’t stay here because this is not my country. But there’s nothing for me at home either. I don’t know what to do’. “My camera man had to stop shooting because he was crying. It was so, so sad.” The two images that stuck with her the most, though, were of children. The first is of three disabled boys, standing in a desert storm trying to close their jackets with what was left of their arms. “They were like scarecrows on the rocks. To see young lives just blowing or withering in the wind…it was very disturbing. “This was the first project where I got to see how children and people with special needs suffered…there were not enough wheelchairs, kids had to sit on the floor or in a makeshift box with wheels.” The other image was of a little girl, about nine, outside a medical facility waiting for treatment. “It was the determination in her face…I felt that was a ray of hope. I could feel the spirit of the Syrian people in that young girl…who had come by herself, and was still holding it together. I just hope when people see these images they can see the humanitarian crisis, (but also) the people — that there is hope too, not just suffering.” The UN’s refugee agency UNHCR, medical staff, and volunteer camp workers, were doing an “amazing job”. “(UNHCR have) poured $1 million into refugee camps in Lebanon, Jordan and Turkey. “Compared to what the Palestinians had to endure in the camps in Lebanon, this is really good. The shelters and tents are like little villages, housing more than 100,000 people. She said she was impressed with the high donations being made by Saudi Arabia and the UAE, even though the countries did not shout about it. Expert doctors also flew in every ten days from the Gulf states and some children were flown to GCC countries for specialised surgery, she said. “So in that darkness, there was some hope that came to light…some kids were born with a club foot but were so poor, or lived in such remote parts, they had never been able to be treated. And now they could be.” According to the UNHCR website, more than 1.6 million Syrian refugees are being hosted in foreign countries, with the majority in Lebanon and Jordan — and more than one million of those arrived in the first five months of 2013 alone. Women and children make up three-quarters of the refugee population. If current trends persisted, it could be expected that more than three million Syrians would have left their country by the end of this year, the website said. The exhibition will be going to Qatar and New York with all profits being donated to humanitarian organisations such as UNHCR. It opens at 7pm on June 25 and runs until July 15, at Pro Art Gallery in the Palm Strip Shopping Mall on Jumeirah Beach Road, Jumeirah 1. See www.victimsofwar.ae . sarah@khaleejtimes.com Continue reading
Desperately seeking loving homes
Desperately seeking loving homes Dhanusha Gokulan / 23 June 2013 You may or may not be a cat lover but it is very hard to not find Didi adorable. The orange-striped beauty, who was abandoned at a construction site and suffered from a broken paw for several weeks, is in desperate need of a permanent or foster home. Didi is one of a seasonally increasing number of neglected pets, which appeared to be abandoned by owners going abroad over the summer. “Didi is very friendly. She’s great, especially with kids. She was found in Ajman and a few shopkeepers were taking care of her. She had a piece of glass stuck in her paw and it was bent to almost 90 degrees,” said Ludmila Subbota, an animal rights activist with Rosso Carota Rescue Cats (RCRC). Didi was one of the four cats and 14 dogs who were put up for adoption at the second Cats and Dogs Adoption Day at the Zabeel Veterinary Hospital near the World Trade Centre, on Friday. Mixed breeds, salukis, stray cats, and abandoned house pets looking for homes were up for adoption at the hospital. Zabeel veterinary Hospital manager Hawra Al Hashimi said the second adoption day, after the first one in May, had gone well. “Our hospital provides the space, and works closely with a few agencies like Animal Protection Association Dubai (APA); RCRC; and Arabian Saluki Centre of Dubai (Ascod).” The cats and dogs which are up for adoption have been neutered and vaccinated by doctors at the Zabeel Veterinary Hospital. The group of volunteers from APA, RCRC, and Ascod find it very hard to find a safe home for the older dogs as most people prefer pups, particularly pedigree. The experts also suggested that dog owners abandon the pets before they leave for their summer holidays. “The biggest problem is the transient expatriate population. Animal owners are suddenly told that they cannot travel with the cat or dog. But making travel arrangements for their pets are not as expensive as it seems. When flying to Europe, an excess baggage ticket for a pet would cost the owner about 150 to 300 Euros,” said volunteer with Ascod Trine Lund Petersen. Surprisingly, several Salukis’ were up for adoption. “The Saluki breed garners a lot of respect in Arab culture. They are beautiful dogs and it is really surprising to see that people are just abandoning them. Most of them are found close to the outskirts and the desert region. Within the city limits, we sometimes find them in Ajman and Al Khan,” Petersen said. “The voluntary agencies don’t have a lot of funds to treat and protect these animals. Some of the cats and dogs have been micro chipped, (though) many others have not. The hospital provides them with 50 per cent off on treatment of these animals when they are brought in. After which, we put them up for adoption,” added Al Hashimi. Dr Sana Peera, a Veterinary doctor at the Clinic said: “We provide the agencies with a space and treatment for the cats and dogs. Once we have treated them, it is completely safe to take the animal in. All these cats and dogs need is a loving home.” Before finding a permanent home for the cats and dogs, they are placed in foster care for a period of about two weeks. However, if an adoptee is found for the dog, the agencies run a background check and visit the new owner’s home. “We make them sign several consent forms and we check out their houses before the animals are moved in. We check if the owners are truly serious about keeping the pet. We get them to sign consent forms and there is a clause which states that the pet can be returned to the agency, if the owner cannot manage with it,” said Subbota. She added: “I guess we need to raise more awareness. It would really help if a centralised micro chipping system was to be introduced.” dhanusha@khaleejtimes.com Continue reading
Peshawar mosque blast kills 15
Peshawar mosque blast kills 15 (AFP) / 21 June 2013 A suicide attack on Friday killed 15 people and wounded more than 25 others at a mosque and religious seminary on the edge of Peshawar, officials said. The bomber struck in the largely Shia area of Gulshan Colony on the outskirts of the city, which abuts Taleban and Al Qaeda-linked strongholds in the northwestern tribal belt on the Afghan border. The attack came just days after US officials said they hoped to open peace talks with Afghan Taleban in Doha, capital of the Gulf state of Qatar. “It was a suicide attack in which 15 people were killed and more than 25 others were wounded,” senior police official Shafi Ullah said at the scene. “The suicide bomber, who was on foot, first opened fire at police guards who were deployed outside the mosque, then entered the prayer hall where he blew himself up amid worshippers just before the start of prayers,” he added. The force of the blast punched holes in the walls and roof of the prayer hall, the floor of which was littered with bloodied pieces of human flesh, dead bodies, Islamic books and prayer caps, an eyewitness said. Prayer leader Aamir Shakiri said he was just about to join the worshippers when he heard gun shots, followed by a “deafening blast”. “Thick mosque engulfed the entire mosque and it was difficult to see anything but I was able to see dead bodies and injured people shouting for help,” he said. Police official Imran Shahid said that at least three suicide bombers had originally intended to carry out the attack. “Two of them fled while one of their accomplices managed to enter the prayer hall and blow himself up,” he said. There was no immediate claim of responsibility, but sectarian attacks in Pakistan are on the rise. Ali Iqbal Qazilbash, a 24-year-old Peshawar University student, said he rushed out of his uncle’s home when he heard the explosion. “It was really horrifying to see blood-soaked and mutilated bodies lying on the floor of the hall,” Qazilbash said. “I immediately started knocking on doors in the neighbourhood and calling people for help.” In the country’s business capital of Karachi, gunmen shot dead a provincial lawmaker, his son and a passer-by outside a mosque. Sajid Qureshi, in his early 50s, and his 25-year-old son were targeted after Friday prayers in the congested Nazimabad neighbourhood. Qureshi was a member of the Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM), the most powerful political party in Karachi now considering whether to join the government in Sindh province. “He died on the spot, while his son and the third victim died at hospital,” police official Amir Farooqi said. Karachi, a city of 18 million people, contributes 42 per cent of Pakistan’s GDP but is rife with murder and kidnappings and has been plagued for years by ethnic, sectarian and political violence. Officials also said two members of a pro-government militia were killed when militants armed with guns and rockets attacked their homes in the northwestern tribal district of Bajaur on the Afghan border. To tribal policemen were also injured, administration official Abdul Haseeb said. Writing in English-language newspaper The News on Friday, analyst Ayaz Amir reflected on the repercussions for Pakistan of prospective peace talks between the Afghan Taleban and the United States. He said talks would make it almost impossible for Pakistan to open a new military front against domestic insurgents in the northwest. He said the “significance of the Taleban gaining, at long last, virtual American diplomatic recognition” would be a triumph for Afghan Taleban leader Mullah Omar but a “problem” for Pakistan. “Because Mullah Omar’s resurgent emirate, waiting patiently for the Americans to depart, now extends, like a dagger, into Pakistan — in the form of (Pakistani Taleban leader) Hakimullah (Mehsud)’s Waziristan.” Continue reading




