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Syrian refugees learn to cope with harsh realities of life
Syrian refugees learn to cope with harsh realities of life Nivriti Butalia & Leslie Pableo / 31 May 2013 People displaced by war in Syria learn to cope with harsh realities of life at a camp in Jordan Blonde-haired teenaged boys in trousers that fall short of their ankles pushing wheelbarrows piled high with food cartons. Women in printed hijabs and black abayas carrying bags — and, if a hand is free — shielding their eyes from the sun. Large spirals of barbed wire fencing, land rovers and SUVs with UN number plates, dust-coated sedans stocked with household supplies and that serve as mobile homes. A chain of water trucks forming a mini traffic jam, and clusters of men milling around, smoking cigarettes, and sizing up each new car that draws closer to the security check. This is what you see in the 50 metres before entering the gate of Zaatari, the refugee camp for Syrians in the Mafraq Governate of Jordan. A worker with UN agency World Food Programme (WFP) at the camp says, “We prefer to call them beneficiaries – refugees doesn’t sound right”. Once inside, it’s more of what you see outside. You also see a sign that reads ‘Avenue Champs Elysees Paris’, indicating the way to an unregulated bustling market place where you can source everything from dustpans and fruit juices to wedding dresses and mobile chargers — all at a cost, of course, and money is scarce. Walking down Zaatari’s Champs Elysees many different sounds and tongues resonate. Besides the high-pitched “hello!”, “Sala’m walekum!”, and even the odd “I love you!”, there are broadly two reactions. Some see the camera, get angry and mutter their protests. They fear their photographs will be aired on TV and their relatives in Syria will have a price to pay. So they turn away and cuss. Others do the opposite. They rush to position themselves in front of the lens, posing, shrieking, laughing, parting forefinger and middle finger, making the universal sign for a victory, and baring teeth surprisingly undamaged by the constant intake of nicotine. Everyone at Zaatari seem to love cigarettes. Take Fatima, for instance, who seated in her tent, on the jute mats provided by UNHCR, flicks ash from a borrowed cigarette. The brand? – Gitanes, from a pack that a UN worker offered. The ash is tipped in a flat shallow empty that may well have contained tuna – a component of dry rations that WFP provides. WFP is working to end the dry ration spell and replace it with a food voucher scheme that, besides being a lot more logistically-sound for WFP – they won’t have to fly in massive quantities of cardboard cased beans and wheat — this gives refugees the freedom and dignity to buy what they want, even yoghurt or ketchup – neither seen as essential food. No alcohol and cigarettes, though. Those are luxuries that will not be covered by emergency aid. Fatima, tipping her cigarette, says she hasn’t smoked since she was young and would sit with her girlfriends and gossip. Fatima is 39. She’s been at Zaatari since November. Before which she was at Yarmoukh — the Palestinian camp in Damascus. She’s here with her three younger brothers. A fourth joined rebel forces in Syria. BIRTH PANGS: Ruba, 26-years-old Syrian wth her baby at a hospital at the Zaatari Syrian Refugee Camp. Fatima is unmarried but she had ring that she sold to buy a TV so she can get news in her tent of her village. Her house was bombed and she doesn’t want to go back. Even though she’s sick of eating the same food, she says her life is much better here. She wishes she had money to buy detergent and yoghurt, and olives, and shoes so she didn’t have to borrow a pair from her friend and neighbour (whom she met at the camp) Umm Shadi, whenever she has to go collect her daily loaf of bread. The need for detergent is especially acute. Over time Fatima’s mattresses have gotten dirty and they’re not easily replaced. As an alternative, she’s wrapped her black mattresses in a plastic sheet so she can clean it with water, a resource more scarce than clean mattresses. The sight of crowds is consistent all throughout the crowds of people carrying water, bags, boxes, vegetables, and babies – An average of 70 babies are born in Zaatari every week at the Gynécologie Sans Frontières tent, the only ‘delivery room’ at the camp. Zaatari, set up on 29 July 2012, is the second largest refugee camp in the world — Dadaab in North East Kenya they say is the largest. FUN TIME: Syrian refugee children having fun after the WFP feeding programme. But unlike Dadaab, Zaatari hasn’t been around that long and it is already a township. Two thousand Syrians cross the border into Jordan every day. At present, UN officials say there are “definitely over 100,000 people in the camp”. The numbers multiply daily. It’s difficult to keep track as people come in hordes. There is a necessary registration that happens when they enter the camp — most arrive at night – but there is no de-registration for those who leave. The numbers tell their own story. Donations filter in, but there is a worry that donor fatigue will set in and make food and aid all the more precious. As far as philanthropy goes, the UAE donated a Toyota pick-up and a generator in December 2012 to WFP operations for Syrian refugees in Syria’s neighbouring countries. There is even a new camp managed by the Emirati Red Crescent called the Emirati Jordanian Camp that opened on April 10 near Amman, a 45 minute drive from Zaatari, set up in the middle of muted sand-skree-pink oleander bushes infested landscape. The camp has a capacity to house over 5,000 people and they plan to push that up to 25,000. BARBED CHATTER: Syrian men hang out on ‘Des Champs Elysees’. Laure Chadraoui, the WFP spokesperson in Jordan, says: “Thanks to the support of many donors including the UAE, we were able to provide food assistance to Syrian refugees.” She says: “We have a strong partnership with the UAE who since 1973 has contributed over $18 million to WFP’s food assistance worldwide.” Laure’s worry is that donations will dry up. “As people continue to flee the conflict in Syria, we will scale up our operations to reach 3.6 million refugees — four times the number of refugees we are reaching now. In order to continue our food assistance, and step up our operations, we seek to raise over one billion dollars to meet the food needs of people affected by the conflict.” BARBED CHATTER: Syrian men hang out on ‘Des Champs Elysees’. In the first three months of the camp, WFP served three million hot meals to the refugees, cooked in Amman. The meals were mostly rice and chicken, rice and meatballs with zucchini. This wasn’t cost effective. As well, that people were tired of eating the same thing day in and day out. So the WFP switched to dry food rations — cartons of which are often seen piled high on those wheelbarrows and pushed by young boys. The box is made up of pasta, bulgur wheat, rice, lentils, macaroni, vegetable oil (“Chef’s choice, 100 per cent sunflower oil”), sugar and salt. UNHCR provides free food that includes tomato paste, canned meat, tuna, tea, beans, halawa and hummus. To call it a camp is inaccurate. Even ‘township’ is off the mark. In its own right — with over 28,000 shelters and an approximate 12,000 caravans and 16,000 tents and over a 100,000 people within the 530.95 hectares boundaries of the ‘camp’ – Zaatari is a fast-growing metropolis. — nivriti@khaleejtimes.com Continue reading
Dh1,000 fine each month for non-renewal of labour cards
Dh1,000 fine each month for non-renewal of labour cards Salah Al Deberky / 31 May 2013 The Labour Ministry is strict about the issuance of labour cards for private sector employees, and it is evidence of how serious employers are in implementing the terms and conditions of their contracts and the clear work relations with their respective employees,” said Humaid bin Demas, assistant undersecretary of the Ministry of Labour during the Open Day in Dubai on Thursday. In reply to employers who gave excuses that they were unaware of the conditions governing the issuance of the labour cards, and that the staff of Tas’heel, an online government system designed to simplify all labour related processes, did not inform them that it is necessary to get the cards issued, it was said that the issue of work permits contain a condition that it is important to get the labour card issued within 60 days from the date of the issue of the permit. Employers and representatives have appealed to the Ministry to waive off fines imposed on them for not applying for labour cards after giving justifications. Some of them said they had no knowledge of the importance of the card, while others said Tas’heel did not direct them about how to get it. Bin Demas said employers were just giving excuses and said every work permit stipulated the importance of getting a labour card. “Employers ignore the fact that they will be slapped a fine of Dh1,000 each month if the labour card is not got within 60 days,” and called on employers to abide by the rules and laws of the ministry has designed in the interest of the public. “The Ministry uses the date of the issue of the labour card as reference and record in legal matters concerning the company and its employees,” he added. The labour card guarantees and secures the rights of the two parties (employer and employee), and the continuity of labour relations between them, an obvious reference to a proper relationship between the two parties concerned, he reiterated. Labour cards of employees will be cancelled if the employers lagged in getting the cards renewed, he said noting that, renewal of the labour card takes only 15 minutes at Tas’heel offices. Elaborating, he said cancellation of the labour card would require the applicant to resubmit an application. Applicants at the ministry are required to re-activate the labour cards after being cancelled, but the procedure is not available at the ministry. salah@khaleejtimes.com Continue reading
Cancer Awareness: Young voice, vital message
Cancer Awareness: Young voice, vital message Kelly Clarke / 31 May 2013 With the Middle East carrying one of the world’s highest incidence rates of breast cancer in women under the age of 40, one Dubai-born student wants to spread an important message to the women of the UAE: “Early detection can save lives.” Kelly Clarke speaks to nine-year-old Aaditya Singh who is spreading a message on breast cancer and hopes to meet Shaikh Mohammed to request for a free or subsidised cancer screening programme for women A Dubai-based student is intent on spreading cancer awareness in the UAE. Aaditya Singh’s message is loud and clear. “Early detection of breast cancer can save lives,” says the nine-year-old. The Dubai-born student has been actively involved in a number of social and environmental awareness campaigns over the past few years and he is intent on pushing for greater openness about the illness in the UAE. “He knows more about breast cancer than an average child his age or even older,” says his mother Veenu Kanwar. At the age of seven, after his close friend lost his mother to the disease, Aaditya’s curiosity about cancer was apparent. ‘I thought only old people are supposed to die. Does that mean that you can also get cancer and die?’ was the question he asked his mother. It was difficult for Aaditya to comprehend that someone in their 30s or 40s could die from this thing called ‘cancer’, which is where his drive to “make a difference” came from. Appreciation for life was something instilled in Aaditya from a young age. “As a mother, one thing I want from my kids is for them to respect what they have and to give what they can,” says Kanwar. She said raising a generation with the right values is the key base to securing a successful future for each individual and she accredits a lot of Aaditya’s awareness work to his teachers. “I am thankful that Aaditya’s school, the Delhi Private School, Sharjah, includes social and environmental awareness as a significant and integral part of the curriculum. This really helps inculcate the right attitude in children as they grow.” From poster campaigns to interpretative dance, Aaditya has been proactive in spreading awareness in the UAE for over two years. And following the recent publicity on prophylactic mastectomies — the removal of healthy breasts without prior breast cancer diagnosis — he says he is “appalled, but not surprised to see how fear can make so many women take such drastic steps.” After losing a grandmother, he never got to meet, to the disease, he has made his mother gift him one thing on his birthday every year — get a mammogram done — and on her birthday each year, she gets a health check done. “Till about an year ago, he used to knock on the bathroom door while I showered to ask if I found any cancer in my body (that was his idea of self examination).” According to Breast Cancer Statistics Worldwide, about 1 in 8 women in the developed world are at risk of getting breast cancer, but early detection can offer a 95 per cent chance of survival. Although Dubai has been the centre of improved progress with regards to cancer awareness, regular screening is still not a common way of life due to several factors including cost implications and social/cultural reasons. With the oncology sector more advanced in the West, the Journal of Oncology says breast cancer in the Arab world is the most common cancer among Arabic women and affects younger women than their counterparts in industrialised nations. The Middle East has a significantly higher incidence of breast cancer in women under the age of 40, with 80 per cent of cases found at an advanced stage. Aaditya’s work Aaditya has been passionately involved with the ‘Protect Your Mom Campaign’ (PYM) — a unique Dubai based, zero-cost campaign that relies on the creative abilities and pestering power of students, and the reach of social networking to reiterate the importance of early detection. “I am too young to know a lot, but old enough to understand that breast cancer can be deadly … the best chance that anyone has against it is through early detection.” Last year, Aaditya entered a yearly contest, initiated by PYM, wherein they invite creative entries from students to raise awareness. Feeling that his words were not being taken seriously, Aaditya’s face appeared on the video-sharing site Youtube in a bid to spread his message globally. “When an eight-year-old talks about breast cancer, no one pays attention so I am trying to convey my message through dance.” This was the introductory message on Aaditya’s dance video. He spent many hours planning the dance routine, and weaved meaningful songs in Arabic, Hindi and English into his story, so that he could reach out to as many people as possible. And his efforts paid off as the then eight-year-old was crowned winner of the PYM Design & Win Contest – pipping a number of high-school and university students to the post. Aaditya was gifted two airline tickets to India but the selfless nine-year-old isn’t planning on jet-setting back to his family’s home country for a summer holiday. Well aware that cancer care is costly in this part of the world and that many patients travel to India for treatment, Aaditya hopes he can offer these patients a break from everyday life — including trips for radiation and chemotherapy treatment — by giving them something positive to look forward to. Currently in talks with two cancer patients, and awaiting approval from the airlines, he says winning the contest “will be more worthwhile” if they can travel in his place. Aaditya hopes one day of meeting His Highness Shaikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Vice-President and Prime Minister of the UAE and Ruler of Dubai, to request for a free or subsidised cancer screening programme for women, just like the child immunisation programme recently implemented. He says easy and cost effective access to preventive screening, at reliable government medical centres, will encourage more women to come forward to get themselves screened. “I hope the health authorities will consider my request to give all mothers in the UAE a fair chance at beating breast cancer.” kelly@khaleejtimes.com Continue reading




