May 7, 2012

DOCTORS WITHOUT BORDERS PULL BACK IN KASHMIR

[As violence has lessened in Indian-administered Kashmir recently, the government plans to reduce security bunkers in the capital of Srinagar, there has been a push to lift an unpopular act that gives the armed forces special powers in the region, and tourists have flocked back. Local officials are making plans for new development and improvement projects.]

By Nida Najar 
Rafiq Maqbool/Associated Press PhotoShaheen, 
wounded in an earthquake, waits for medical help 
at Jabla village, 69 miles north of Srinagar
Jammu and KashmirOct. 9, 2005.
Médecins Sans Frontières shut down its operations in the Kupwara district of Kashmir last month and will significantly reduce its activities in the valley as a whole, cutting a staff of 100 by more than half.
The group, known in English as Doctors Without Borders, has operated a mental health program in Kashmir since 2001, its longest-running India project, and its doctors also provide services like immunizations and postnatal care in the area. It began working in Kupwara, which is on the Indian border with Pakistan, in 2005 after an earthquake there.
“The reason that we left Kupwara district really is because of the necessary downscale in our operation,” said J.J. Fisher,  the project coordinator for MSF Holland in Kashmir, who said that the group was trying to conserve resources for medical treatment in case of an emergency. “We do see there are still needs in the area to be met.  It’s not that we’re saying that everything’s perfect in Kupwara district. But sometimes we have to make difficult decisions.”
As violence has lessened in Indian-administered Kashmir recently, the government plans to reduce security bunkers in the capital of Srinagar, there has been a push to lift an unpopular act that gives the armed forces special powers in the region, and tourists have flocked back. Local officials are making plans for new development and improvement projects.
Still, MSF’s departure leaves a vacuum in Kupwara and the Indian-administered Kashmir Valley as a whole, which is still severely in need of mental health services, experts say. Nearly one in five Kashmiris is depressed, according to the psychiatrist Mushtaq Margoob, whopublished a study in 2006 estimating that almost 60 percent of Kashmiris have witnessed traumatic events.
Since MSF’s departure last month, Kupwara has only one psychiatrist in the district hospital for its population of almost 900,000. Kashmir as a whole is short on psychotherapists, who are trained counselors rather than full-fledged doctors who prescribe drugs. Government hospitals have few positions for psychotherapists because drug-based psychiatry is favored.
Kupwara is a largely poor, rural district and one of the most heavily militarized areas in India-administered Kashmir, owing in part to the Border Security Forces that police the Line of Control separating the areas controlled by India and Pakistan.  The literacy level is below the national average, and one of the greatest challenges for MSF staff at first was spreading awareness of concepts like depression.
Some mental health professionals say their services are still desperately needed.
“I have absolutely no idea why they are leaving Kupwara,” said Dr. Arshad Hussain, a psychiatrist based in Srinagar who worked with MSF in Kupwara at the beginning of his career.  “There are absolutely no mental health facilities in all of Kupwara.”
Although it has closed its Kupwara activities, MSF has started a new mental health program in one of the hospitals in Baramulla and plans to expand to nearby Sopore, two towns in central Kashmir with a heavy military presence and strong separatist sentiment in the local population, which MSF says leads to a disproportionate amount of violence compared with the rest of the valley.
MSF was lauded by local physicians for educating the public as well as doctors about mental heath, and also for training staff in counseling in an area where medication is often seen as the key treatment for a traumatized population.  Before MSF entered the valley, the concept of psychotherapy was virtually nonexistent, MSF officials say.
But even trained counselors have difficulty finding jobs now that MSF has pulled out.
Zahoor Ahmad Hawar, a sociologist with a bachelor’s degree in mechanical engineering, worked for MSF for seven years and went to Holland for a psychotherapy certificate degree from the Netherlands Institute of Psychology.  He left MSF in August and now has a part-time job at a private engineering college. “Every district hospital, there should be one psychiatrist there, but there is no psychotherapist,” he said.
The large number of trained counselors with nowhere to work is the greatest loss from MSF’s departure, other doctors say. “It’s not just MSF as an aid organization that we have lost,” said Dr. Hussain.  “It’s that skilled manpower that we have lost.”

IN KOLKATA, CLINTON TALKS INDIAN RETAIL AND IRANIAN OIL


[The secretary of state is on a three-day trip to India and is scheduled to meet later Monday with Ms. Banerjee, who has been one of the chief opponents of a proposal to allow multi-brand retailers like Walmart to enter India. “There is an enormous amount of experience that can be brought to India on supply-chain management, on developing relationships with small producers,” Mrs. Clinton said Monday morning.]
By Heather Timmons
Rupak De Chowdhuri/ReutersU.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, right, 
arrives for a meeting with Mamata Banerjee, chief minister of 
West Bengal, Kolkata, West BengalMay 7, 2012
The U.S. secretary of state, Hillary Rodham Clinton, told a town hall meeting in Kolkata on Monday that she planned to discuss opening India’s retail sector to foreign investment with Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee and that India should do even more to reduce its dependence on Iranian oil.
Mrs. Clinton also said she was a fan of the  Bengali poet and composer Rabindranath Tagore, and joked that she and her husband are argumentative, much like Bengalis.
The secretary of state is on a three-day trip to India and is scheduled to meet later Monday with Ms. Banerjee, who has been one of the chief opponents of a proposal to allow multi-brand retailers like Walmart to enter India. “There is an enormous amount of experience that can be brought to India on supply-chain management, on developing relationships with small producers,” Mrs. Clinton said Monday morning.
She spoke at a meeting at La Martiniere School for Girls, a private school established in 1836, in a session moderated by NDTV journalist Barkha Dutt. “I know how difficult it is for women to be elected anywhere,” Mrs. Clinton told the crowd of hundreds of students and others meant to represent a cross-section of Kolkata. “When I meet a woman who has broken through those barriers, we share a common bond of having gone through the fire of electoral politics.”
The primary purchasers of Iranian oil — India, China, Japan and the European countries — “are being asked to lower their supply to keep pressure on Iran,” she said, while Saudi Arabia, Iraq and other suppliers are putting more oil into the market. There is an international consensus that these sanctions are working, she said.
India understands the importance of trying to use diplomacy to resolve these difficult threats and is certainly working toward lowering their purchases of Iranian oil,” she said. “We hope they will do even more.”
The Secretary of State’s visit coincides with a visit from Iranian businessmen to New Delhi and Mumbai. She flies to New Delhi Monday night, where she will meet with officials ahead of the “U.S. – India Strategic Dialogue” in Washington, D.C. June 13. On Tuesday, Iranian businessmen and Indian trade groups will have a press conference in New Delhi.