“We are particularly worried about the lack of medical facilities – many of the camp's 942 residents need urgent medical attention, including a mother of seven who suffers from leukemia and a teenage diabetic boy,” UNHCR spokesperson, Jennifer Pagonis, said in a statement on Tuesday.
"The tented camp is overcrowded and many people are suffering from respiratory and other ailments that need proper medical treatment. But the nearest hospital in Iraq is located four hours away by car and the road runs through dangerous territory," the statement said.
At least three people, including a six-month-old baby, have died from treatable illnesses since the camp opened last December, it added.
Many of the camp's 942 residents need urgent medical attention. |
"What are the neighbouring countries and international community waiting for? Are they waiting for us to be in our caskets? We are dying here and no one pays attention," said Qussai Mohammed Saleh, 32, a Palestinian truck driver who has been living with his wife and two children in a tent in the al-Waleed border camp since last December.
"We are suffering high temperatures as summer approaches and sandstorms hit us from time to time in this desert," Saleh told IRIN in a phone interview from the camp.
"We have children, women and elderly people in need of urgent help - especially those with chronic problems like asthma, blood pressure, diabetic and cardiac disorders," Saleh added.
"If our problems are too big to tackle properly, then bring in a few generators and send in a medical team – that’s not difficult."
“Deadly environment”
On its latest visit the UNHCR team could only give first aid treatment to some pregnant women, a Palestinian man who had been kidnapped and badly tortured in Baghdad and to a suicidal woman traumatized by the murder of her son and husband.
What are the neighbouring countries and international community waiting for? Are they waiting for us to be in our caskets? We are dying here and no one pays attention. |
The refugee agency also warned that living conditions at al-Waleed are likely to get worse during the summer months. Temperatures of more than 50 degrees Celsius have already been recorded this month, while sandstorms are another regular hazard.
Flight from Baghdad
Water is trucked to the camp on a daily basis, but this is rationed to less than one litre per person because of the increasing numbers of Palestinians fleeing to al-Waleed to escape threats and attacks in Baghdad.
More on Palestinians stranded on Iraqi border |
Palestinian refugees despair after year marooned between Iraq and Syria |
A steady flow of Palestinians have fled Baghdad since March 2006, when intimidation, forced evictions and attacks against their community began mounting.
Syria let a first group cross the border and settle at al-Hol refugee camp in the al-Hassekeh governorate in May last year. A second group was stranded at al-Tanf refugee camp, but those currently fleeing Baghdad can no longer access al-Tanf, home to 389 Palestinians.
Today, Palestinians fleeing Baghdad for the Syrian border have nowhere to go but al-Waleed, which lacks the infrastructure to support them.
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This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions