Zürcher Nachrichten - In Lebanon shelters, women care for tiny babies, face pregnancy

EUR -
AED 4.201449
AFN 75.506302
ALL 93.885635
AMD 419.687314
ANG 2.048106
AOA 1050.218578
ARS 1689.747935
AUD 1.638078
AWG 2.059251
AZN 1.94939
BAM 1.957491
BBD 2.303591
BDT 140.980581
BGN 1.964878
BHD 0.431288
BIF 3401.958397
BMD 1.144028
BND 1.476734
BOB 7.921063
BRL 5.845647
BSD 1.143738
BTN 110.062428
BWP 15.574001
BYN 3.30939
BYR 22422.958479
BZD 2.300077
CAD 1.604672
CDF 2585.50481
CHF 0.923967
CLF 0.027076
CLP 1065.617234
CNY 7.748791
CNH 7.754786
COP 3742.677777
CRC 519.068917
CUC 1.144028
CUP 30.316755
CVE 110.365184
CZK 24.219889
DJF 203.317194
DKK 7.477416
DOP 67.030847
DZD 152.243926
EGP 57.772914
ERN 17.160427
ETB 184.591682
FJD 2.565198
FKP 0.848456
GBP 0.850642
GEL 3.003121
GGP 0.848456
GHS 13.197288
GIP 0.848456
GMD 84.658515
GNF 10030.666963
GTQ 8.725921
GYD 239.276158
HKD 8.969584
HNL 30.629804
HRK 7.535835
HTG 149.485042
HUF 362.932043
IDR 20526.674049
ILS 3.475044
IMP 0.848456
INR 110.428666
IQD 1498.260048
IRR 1573039.179393
ISK 143.415853
JEP 0.848456
JMD 181.166536
JOD 0.811161
JPY 185.854338
KES 147.866123
KGS 100.045731
KHR 4624.015574
KMF 490.788624
KPW 1029.625722
KRW 1702.051711
KWD 0.353562
KYD 0.953078
KZT 540.545957
LAK 25806.072074
LBP 102414.095334
LKR 384.328718
LRD 207.010628
LSL 18.874533
LTL 3.378019
LVL 0.692012
LYD 7.301628
MAD 10.67042
MDL 20.112169
MGA 4867.4397
MKD 61.633841
MMK 2401.769725
MNT 4104.925027
MOP 9.235921
MRU 45.588383
MUR 53.941376
MVR 17.687113
MWK 1983.191578
MXN 20.06615
MYR 4.685831
MZN 73.115293
NAD 18.874533
NGN 1578.633909
NIO 42.088758
NOK 11.036905
NPR 176.101626
NZD 1.957948
OMR 0.439442
PAB 1.143678
PEN 3.879673
PGK 5.111417
PHP 70.556857
PKR 317.992781
PLN 4.339358
PYG 6932.292801
QAR 4.180595
RON 5.231686
RSD 117.369359
RUB 89.37662
RWF 1684.150873
SAR 4.302764
SBD 9.233868
SCR 15.389091
SDG 686.993316
SEK 11.036104
SGD 1.477174
SHP 0.854133
SLE 27.885738
SLL 23989.713905
SOS 653.59616
SRD 43.028099
STD 23679.080038
STN 24.52226
SVC 10.006646
SYP 126.451869
SZL 18.859955
THB 38.4741
TJS 10.567847
TMT 4.01554
TND 3.377018
TOP 2.754546
TRY 53.932368
TTD 7.766677
TWD 37.081514
TZS 3004.21658
UAH 51.08574
UGX 4225.83601
USD 1.144028
UYU 45.96972
UZS 13735.868429
VES 829.237389
VND 30082.229245
VUV 136.56786
WST 3.133482
XAF 656.527139
XAG 0.02047
XAU 0.000285
XCD 3.091795
XCG 2.061271
XDR 0.815343
XOF 656.524267
XPF 119.331742
YER 272.969304
ZAR 18.289626
ZMK 10297.633379
ZMW 20.842827
ZWL 368.376708
  • CMSC

    -0.0700

    22.03

    -0.32%

  • RIO

    -0.5200

    90.15

    -0.58%

  • NGG

    1.4800

    83.99

    +1.76%

  • BCE

    -0.3000

    21.84

    -1.37%

  • CMSD

    -0.0500

    22.26

    -0.22%

  • BCC

    -2.9500

    77.19

    -3.82%

  • GSK

    -1.0100

    51.76

    -1.95%

  • BTI

    -0.3200

    62.84

    -0.51%

  • JRI

    -0.0600

    12.94

    -0.46%

  • AZN

    -0.3900

    168.9

    -0.23%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    67.35

    0%

  • BP

    0.8200

    41.9

    +1.96%

  • RYCEF

    -0.7700

    17.9

    -4.3%

  • RELX

    -0.3200

    33.7

    -0.95%

  • VOD

    0.1200

    15.74

    +0.76%

In Lebanon shelters, women care for tiny babies, face pregnancy
In Lebanon shelters, women care for tiny babies, face pregnancy / Photo: Joseph EID - AFP

In Lebanon shelters, women care for tiny babies, face pregnancy

Mariam Zein cradled her 11-week-old son on a mattress on the floor where she and her family have sheltered near Beirut since the Israel-Hezbollah war upended her young family's life.

Text size:

"I was really excited when I was in my ninth month of pregnancy... I never thought he'd be born and there'd be war," said Zein, 26, clutching baby Hussein.

"I haven't been able to enjoy my son -- my first child... to see him getting bigger in his own bed, in his own home."

"I was very sad, and I'm still sad," she told AFP, nappies and baby formula wedged near a photocopier, clothes hanging on an improvised line.

Zein fled with her husband, their baby and other relatives when war erupted between Israel and Hezbollah on March 2, drawing Lebanon into the Middle East conflict.

She does not know if her home in south Lebanon is still standing.

Israel has kept up strikes despite a fragile US-Iran ceasefire, a landmark meeting this week between Israeli and Lebanese officials in Washington, and reports that leaders from both countries would talk for the first time in decades.

Lebanese authorities say the war has killed more than 2,100 people and displaced more than one million others.

Some 140,000 people are in overcrowded shelters like the centre in Beirut's suburbs housing Zein's family and around 500 other people, among them five pregnant women and others with young babies.

Zein said she stopped breastfeeding because there was no privacy, and now struggles to buy baby formula, while Hussein is outgrowing his clothes.

"Whatever happens I just want my son near me," she said.

- Pregnancy -

According to the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), an estimated 620,000 women and girls are displaced, including some 13,500 pregnant women, of whom "1,500 are expected to give birth within the next 30 days".

The agency and other organisations have sought to support women as the authorities struggled to cope.

In a small tent containing a portable ultrasound, obstetrician and gynaecologist Theresia Nassar has checked on women including Zein as part of a mobile health clinic run by charity Caritas Lebanon with support from UNFPA.

Displaced pregnant women risk missing important tests and scans, she said, and they are trying to fill the gaps.

"We're not just worried about physical health but also their mental health," she said.

"They don't know if they can go home, they don't have their medication, they're not being properly followed."

Elsewhere, at a school-turned-shelter in central Beirut, heavily pregnant Ghada Issa, 36, is due to deliver a baby girl in a few weeks.

But "this place, this environment, is not for pregnant women", said Issa, who was displaced from south Lebanon with her husband, their daughter Siham, five, and son Ali, four.

They live in a cramped tent, and she said even the basics are a problem, like having to make frequent trips to crowded, far-away communal toilets.

- Twins -

Her husband set up an improvised bed so she doesn't have to sleep on the floor.

Underneath are precious donated items like tiny socks and little blankets. A worker from charity Amel Association International brought then a "baby kit" including nappies and baby powder.

Without donations and other support, "there wouldn't be anything" for the baby, Issa said, as people playing football yelled, children squealed and washing hung on improvised lines.

The shelter's administration said some 20 pregnant women and two who had recently given birth were among more than 2,600 people staying there.

"I haven't got my head around the idea of having a baby here," Issa said.

"I'm still hoping that one day they'll tell me, let's go to the village, and I'll have the baby at home."

In a university classroom in south Lebanon's city of Sidon, Ghada Fadel, 36, cares for her tiny twin sons. Mohammed and Mehdi are just over one month old, and in blue jumpsuits and matching beanies.

The family has been there since she was eight months' pregnant, after fleeing their border village.

"After we left the house, they (Israel) bombed it. The house is gone" along with everything they had prepared for the twins, Fadel said.

"I was hoping to give birth and come home," she said sadly.

"Every mum hopes to take her kids home... no matter the circumstances."

T.Furrer--NZN