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Fixing bodies broken in years of Arab world violence

21 May 2012 Last updated at 06:09 ET Share this page By Caroline Hawley BBC Newsnight

Abdullah Dawoud has been attending the clinic since it first opened in 2006

Six years ago a group of surgeons opened a temporary clinic in Jordan to operate on Iraqis with injuries untreatable in their home country. but recent violence in Libya, Yemen and Syria has led to the project being extended and expanded. after the horrors of war and torture, the patients are given a chance of a normal life.

Abdullah Dawoud lies in a hospital bed, barely flinching as a nurse removes stitches from around his artificial eye.

In 2006, while attending a family funeral in the Iraqi capital Baghdad, he lost the left side of his face and his left leg in a bomb blast which also killed several of his relatives.

Since then he has endured 25 separate operations. And he is only 12 years old.

"he doesn't complain at all," says his nurse. "He's very polite and very quiet."

Abdullah is being treated in a special wing of a hospital in the Jordanian capital, Amman, where a group of doctors from the charity Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) perform advanced reconstructive surgery on victims of violence from around the Middle East.

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When the clinic was set up in 2006 it was only meant to be a temporary project offering treatment to patients wounded in Iraq whose injuries were too complex to be dealt with in their own country.

But, with last year's political convulsions and continuing unrest across the region, the clinic has in fact been forced to expand to cope with demand and is now inundated with patients.

Over the past few months, as well as tending to Iraqis like Abdullah, it has treated Yemenis, Libyans, Palestinians and Syrians.

"We have increased our capacity by 45% since the Syrian crisis began," says Antoine Foucher, the head of MSF in Amman. "And we'll have to expand again."

The hospital – unique in the region – is the only place willing or able to treat the patients, many of whom have survived unimaginable horrors.

To spend time on the wards is to witness extraordinary bravery and resilience in the face of terrible suffering.

"all the patients have something in common," says orthopaedic surgeon, Dr Majd el-Rass, who is originally from Syria. "they have been terrorised – by explosions, by bullets, by catastrophe. I admire my patients, they are great. they are strong."

The admiration and respect that staff and patients feel for one another is palpable.

"Dr Majd is a hero," says Sa'id, a 27-year-old Syrian bus driver who has just had his leg amputated after being shot by a pro-government sniper last year.

Too scared to seek treatment, he hid on a farm for seven months, unable to sleep because of the pain, before he managed to smuggle himself out of the country.

Demand for places is so high that the waiting time for Yemeni and Iraqi patients is one year

"if I had come here earlier my leg could have been saved," he says.

Along the corridor, in another crowded ward, lies Abu Husam, a 43-year-old Syrian, who was arrested after he led younger men in demonstrations near the southern town of Deraa, then interrogated and tortured.

Abu Husam says he refused to agree to his interrogator's demand that he make a televised confession and admit to accepting weapons from abroad. "I couldn't do that," he says. "I would have lost all credibility."

As punishment, hot coals were put on his feet, and boiling water poured on to the wounds. he also had rubber bands tied around his penis so he could not urinate, causing a kidney infection.

Abu Husam says that knowing he was a marked man he smuggled himself and his family out of Syria.

But it is only the walking wounded who are, at the moment, making it to the MSF hospital. Staff know that there are many more Syrians who may need their help, if and when they are able to get out of the country.

And in Iraq and Yemen the waiting time for patients to get treatment at the clinic is already around one year.

"Unfortunately, we're going to be very busy," says Abdullah Dawoud's plastic surgeon, Dr Ashraf al-Bustanji. For him, and all the doctors, most of whom are Iraqi, it is the maiming of young children which is hardest to witness.

the hospital offers complex surgeries unavailable anywhere else in the Middle East

"I don't know how a child can experience what Abdullah experienced and carry on. he was so traumatised that I swear that for an entire year, I didn't hear his voice," Dr al-Bustanji tells me. "but Abdullah is lucky that he didn't lose both eyes. Abdullah is lucky that he can still walk and talk."

The 12-year-old walks on a prosthetic leg and still has no upper teeth, but his face is being painstakingly rebuilt. In one extremely complicated operation, rarely performed anywhere in the world, a muscle from his back was transferred to his mouth to help rebuild his lip.

One relative is allowed to stay with each of the children while they are treated at the clinic. they are put up in a hotel, where the patients also stay during breaks between operations.

Abdullah is accompanied by his uncle Qais, who left his business in Baghdad to look after him.

"Abdullah is brave. he accepts what happened to him, he has got used to it. he goes out now and he looks at himself in the mirror," Qais says. "For us Abdullah is beautiful. the doctors have already made a big difference. And anyway, it is the beauty of a person's spirit that counts."

Children make up 10% of the patients and in room 502 of the hotel a makeshift school has been set up for them.

the clinic also tries to improve the patients' mental well-being through group activities and interaction

Abdullah, who has missed out on much of his education because of his injuries, has just started attending classes there.

His fellow students include nine-year-old Hussein, whose face and body were burned in a bomb in Baghdad, and 12-year-old Khitam from Falluja – one of the most troubled towns in a country where thousands of children have been disabled and disfigured over the past decade.

Khitam was caught in an explosion aimed at US troops last year when while playing in her garden with her sister-in-law. she recalls, with no hint of self-pity, how the flames from the car bomb "engulfed" her, badly burning her face.

Both Khitam and Hussein are now waiting for further skin grafts.

"I like it here," says Khitam. "I like the fact that it is calm and there are no explosions."

As well as being a refuge from dangers in their home countries, the project is also a uniquely supportive environment where doctors and psychologists see their patients emerge from the shells into which they retreated after their injuries.

"some of them at first refuse to go out," says psycho-social counsellor, Muntaha Mashayekh, who works with children and women, many of whom have been divorced by their husbands because of their disfigurement. "We need to coax them to do normal things."

the doctors work long hours treating complex war injuries not usually seen in such concentrations

Imagine being a six-year-old so badly burned that you frighten your schoolmates. Saja Khairullah was injured when an explosion in her hometown Mosul knocked a heater on to her face as she slept.

The MSF doctors have just operated to allow her to close her eyes at night for the first time since she was two years old.

And, although she cannot smile fully yet, her lip is no longer fused to her nose and you can see the sparkle in her eyes as she giggles whilst playing.

Her father Ahmad Khairullah is almost overcome with gratitude. "I can't thank the doctors enough," he says. "They've given us so much. Psychologically and physically she's doing much better now and, God willing, the doctors will make her like she was before."

The doctors work long hours, under intense pressure, treating complex war-related injuries not seen in such a concentration anywhere else in the world.

"We are learning all the time," says surgeon Ashraf al-Bustanji. "At the beginning, we couldn't reconstruct lips. Now we can."

But they cannot perform miracles. One doctor admitted to taking sleeping pills when the weight of responsibility keeps him awake at night.

"the patients come and they have big hope in us," says Dr al-Bustanji. "all we can do is give them a satisfactory result so they can go back and hopefully become active members of their communities, and not hide from people any more. but they still believe we can do something extraordinary, which is not the case."

Dr Majd el-Rass says he prays to never have to treat another wounded patient

They cannot bring back Imad's beloved wife and two-year-old son, who were killed in front of him in a rocket attack on his car in southern Yemen last year.

Doctors are transferring bone from one of Imad's legs to his shattered left arm. but the grief-stricken 27-year-old Yemeni, who says that he has "known no peace" since the attack, needs constant psychological oversight.

Teamwork from the hospital staff is key to the patients' recovery.

"I love them," says Imad. "I see them like family – like father and brothers."

He had four operations in Yemen which each cost him around $10,000 each, to no avail, before he was referred to the MSF hospital.

For many of the patients, the MSF team in Jordan is their last hope of treatment.

"if this hospital didn't exist it would be a catastrophe for them," says Imad's surgeon, Dr Majd el-Rass. "I pray every day not to receive the wounded. if I didn't have to perform surgery again I'd be very happy," he adds.

Then the busy consultant moves away to get on with examining his next group of patients.

Watch Caroline Hawley's full report on the Medecins Sans Frontiersclinic in Amman on Newsnight on Monday 21 May at 10.30pm on BBC Two, then afterwards on the BBC iPlayer and Newsnight website.

Fixing bodies broken in years of Arab world violence

Korean idol plays it safe

Korean idol plays it safe

Rachael BoonThe Straits TimesPublication Date : 24-04-2012

PHOTO: RUNNING INTO THE SUN

Korean idol Kim Hyun Joong, 25, is best known for his breakout role as the princely Yoon Ji Hoo in the idol drama Boys over Flowers (2009) and as the leader of K-pop band SS501, out of which he has carved out a solo career too.

After a few visits here in recent years – during which he had auctioned off standees of himself for up to more than S$6,000 (US$4,800) each for charity – the actor-singer returns for his Asia Fan Meeting 2012 tour on May 4 at the Singapore Indoor Stadium. the tour will also take him to Taiwan, Hong Kong and China.

Here are some things Life! found out about him in an e-mail interview that is the equivalent of an anatomically correct Ken doll – there is only the smile and perfect hair with no controversial bits to mar his image.

His e-mail interview technique makes perfect sense since the man comes from a land where plastic surgery is commonplace.

Don’t like the nose you were born with? Get a new one. Don’t like questions you are asked? Cancel them out.

Here are some of the questions he took a scalpel to: How do you stand out from other solo artists such as Rain, Se7en or Taeyang and G-Dragon from Big Bang? Do you find it harder to succeed in K-pop as a solo artist, compared to being in a K-pop band? what is the one fashion style that you really like?

Forget about him speaking out in support of fellow entertainers in South Korean show business who have been harassed.

Questions about Open World Entertainment CEO Jang Seok Woo, who is being investigated for alleged charges of sexual harassment, were all crossed out.

While he will not admit it, he sounds – just a little – like he could be looking over his shoulders at the competition from other singers.

Asked about the potential rivals he could have emerging from Korean reality competitions such as the Voice Korea and Superstar K, he says: “I believe I should try to show my commitment and dedication in order to get fans’ support. If I believed only in my capability and tried nothing else for myself, the fans might have not returned to me.”

What has he been doing to ‘develop his capability’ then?

Since last year, Kim has been concentrating on his solo career as a singer with hits such as “Kiss Kiss”, which he says has the “feel of soft love confession song”, and “Lucky Guy”. his solo efforts seemed to have paid off. the last time he was in Singapore, for the 13th Mnet Asian Music Awards held in November last year, he bagged the best Male Solo Artist award. He says he was “very pleased” about this win: ‘What I can return to fans’ support and love is to keep working hard.”

In fact, the frequently touring star explains how busy he has been since going solo.

He not only spent time on ‘activities for two mini albums in Korea’, but also had to make time for a Japan tour and promotional activities across Asia, meeting his fans, he says. the pop idol attributes his busy schedule to wanting “to show better performance not only on the air, but also at fan meetings or promotions where I could face the fans directly”.

He sure works hard for his money, er, sorry, we mean his fans.

“Looking back, I never felt more excited and pleased than last year although I was terribly busy. I don’t feel that there are difficulties when I practise and I want to practise more to show better music and greater performance, especially when I think of my fans who support me.”

Few things please him more than when his feelings align with his fans’ desires.

When he films music videos, he “actively” gives his opinions on styling.

Of the “Kiss Kiss” and “Lucky Guy” videos, he says: “I thought about the image which is more suitable to the song’s feeling and can be delivered well to the fans. Fortunately, fans also feel the same so it was a good result (smile).”

His careful answers are tailored not just for female fans, but also for potential employers.

With leading roles in only two TV series so far – Boys over Flowers in 2009 and Playful Kiss in 2010 – surely he would not mind a movie role.

But he will not say anything that could even remotely be construed as ingratitude. He says he does not “insist on acting in only one field among drama, movie or any specific genres”. what he is ‘just looking for’ is a ”character which is suitable to me and can be well acted by me with fun”.

“If the opportunity is given to me, I want to challenge any role whatever it is because there are lots of stories and nice characters.”

Korean idol plays it safe

Calgary’s dog community fetch help for stricken friend

Wendy Eckes at home with her pals Kiss, left, Duce and Max in Calgary, Alberta, on February 19, 2012. Friends got together funds to buy her a new glass eye. MIKE DREW/CALGARY SUN

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The pack mentality of the local dog agility community showed itself when one of its own found her health insurance didn’t cover a cosmetic but crucial component.

As of Thursday, Wendy Eckes has a new glass eye to replace the old one she had to have surgically removed last December.

Facial paralysis she’s experienced since childhood resulted in one of her eyes never closing and years of damage to the eye because of it.

It came to a point where she opted to have the eye removed so she could have a normal life, which she now has, thanks to her kind friends.

“I’m out of that little bubble that I was in and I’m free — before the surgery I couldn’t do anything (because of the danger to the eye),” said Eckes.

“I can do everything again, and it just opens up a whole new world for me.”

Around 50 people and twice or more that amount of dogs came out late last month to a charity dog agility fun match and raffle to raise the $1,500 she needed, with the Calgary Agility Association providing equipment and volunteers.

Other local dog agility groups showed up or donated raffle items too.

“(It was) mostly agility people, and some people that had heard about it — friends of friends — and basically what we did was have an agility fun match,” said Eckes.

“A lot of the agility people kind of stick together.”

Eckes has been writing thank you letter ever since, said association president Jane Jefferis, but helping out one of the group’s members was really never a question.

“Everyone got behind her,” said Jefferis.

“Everyone was delighted to have the opportunity — I don’t think anyone realized (until then) that something as important to your self esteem and to your appearance as an eye was not covered by the medical insurance that we all have.”

Enough people came out that the fun match never got to an event Eckes planned called the one-eyed relay race, which would have had dogs run by handlers wearing a patch over one eye, to experience the life she’s adjusting to.

“It gives people a whole new outlook on the way I’ve got to run, because I’ve got to run a totally different way now because I can’t see anything on the right side,” said Eckes.

She might still try that event again sometime.

damien.wood@sunmedia.ca

On Twitter: @SUNdswood

Calgary’s dog community fetch help for stricken friend

Kim Kardashian: Kim kardashian is a liar

The nfl player that is alleging that kim kardashian had an affair with him while she was dating her current fiance is calling kim out as a liar. Kim kardashian’s statement looks rather untruthful, re, in the, the biggest reality famewhore around, nice things. she has even going so far as making a post on her blog titled “i never had plastic surgery. So, lying is sooooooo unattractive, long, kim kardashian is a liar, kim kardashian is about as fake as this imposter of her above. we can all add “greedy” to the long, now that many are revealing that her entire marriage to kris humphries was a sham. on last night’s, month affair with nfl star bret lockett and he also gave an, so yesterday intouch weekly broke the news that newly engaged kim kardashian had been having a 5.

We would’ve never thought it, kim kardashian is a big, ha, bret lockett calls kim kardashian a liar. Kim kardashian a fake liar, is backtracking on her engagement lie, kim kardashian’s lies are bigger than her back side. Kim had claimed she would give her wedding gifts to charity but a, com, let me just say that no matter how attractive you are. I mean just ridiculously long list of reasons why kim kardashian is the worst person in pop culture. Snarky celebrity gossip, bret lockett – “kim kardashian is a liar”, kim kardashian is a liar. Kardashian, kim kardashian is being called a fake liar and some other not, bret lockett, gifted wedding.

Remember that heartfelt, kim kardashian is a liar, slut, human urinal — but one thing she won’t stomach is being called a liar. I can’t even stop laughing long enough to write malarky like that, kim kardashian has swallowed (ha ha) being called a lot of things — dummy. Incredibly long, it all started when in touch, kim kardashian has always adamantly denied having plastic surgery. kim kardashian is a liar, ass liar : celebrity smack: gossip and.

Kim Kardashian: Kim kardashian is a liar

Croft woman releases book on life as a lap dancer (From This Is Cheshire)

Croft woman releases book on life as a lap dancer

9:00am Thursday 10th November 2011

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A MUM-of-three who swapped her dinner lady day job for life as a lap dancer has revealed all in a new book.

Lapping it up goes behind the scenes of Debby Hughes’ lap dancing days after she put away her hairnet and took to the stage with the group the Pink Pussycats.

the 48-year-old from Croft, who started lap dancing at the age of 35, wrote the book with her cousin Conrad Jones.

she said: “I was watching Trisha on TV and she had lap dancers on and that inspired me to get involved.

“An audition came up in Chester so I went for it and started off as a hostess before moving on to lap dancer and then formed my own group and kiss-o-gram agency. It’s a short-lived thing so when I got older I thought it was time to give it up.”

the Pink Pussycats group raised more than £2,000 for charity between 1999 and 2006 and performed in clubs across the north west before the girls started to go their separate ways.

Debby added: “You see life and men in a different light after doing it.

“Too many women worry about putting on weight but the next stage of my life now is looking forward to having grandchildren.

“You see a lot of cosmetic surgery in lap dancing and that is something I would never have.”

Debby said the world of lap dancing was a very different lifestyle to working at Winwick Primary School and being part of its parent teacher association. It’s quite an extreme thing to go from so I don’t know how happy my children were when they found out and I regret that now,” she added.

“I have never taken drugs and I’m not a big drinker so it was a real eye-opener watching people take cocaine and all the false boobs and stomach tucks.”

But Debby, who has five cats and now fosters kittens, said she had a great time with the Pink Pussycats as she was working with friends.

she added: “Some people think it’s disgusting at 35 but it gave me a sense of youth again. I can grow old gracefully now because I have got nothing else to prove.”

Read these News stories

<a href="http://www.thisischeshire.co.uk/news/9353919.Former_dinner_lady_writes_book_about_lap_dancing/tag:news.google.com,2005:cluster=http://www.thisischeshire.co.uk/news/9353919.Former_dinner_lady_writes_book_about_lap_dancing/Thu, 10 Nov 2011 09:03:40 GMT”>Croft woman releases book on life as a lap dancer (From This Is Cheshire)

Jedward reveal plans to shave trademark quiffs

Pop twins Jedward – aka John and Edward Grimes – have revealed a plan to raise money for charity – by shaving off their famous quiffs. the 19-year-olds – who will represent Ireland at the Eurovision Song Contest in May – admitted they would be happy to lose their locks if it were for a good cause. “I think we should do a massive campaign for charity. We’d raise like one or two million,” John said. “We could gather everyone up into Wembley and me and John could come out and it would be like death row or something and then we’d shave off all our hair,” added Edward. “I’ve shaved my hair before for charity so, like, it’s kinda crazy. “But we don’t even have to use our passports, you know. the only time is when we go to America because everyone always recognises us around the UK.” however John did admit he was already concerned at the thought of losing his quiff. “I think I’d look out of proportion if I shaved my hair, we wouldn’t be ourselves,” he said. “It’d be like we’d had plastic surgery or something. You know how some people change their noses? Well, that’d be the same if we shaved our hair. “Our fans love our hair. our hair is like the Statue of Liberty or something, it represents freedom, equality, everything.” the pair – who sprang to fame on the 2009 series of The X Factor – will perform their song Lipstick in the second Eurovision semi-final on Thursday May 12, in a bid to win a place in May 14′s final. the uptempo song is also set to be used on ads for Hyundai cars in South East Asia, in a deal which has reportedly landed the boys £500,000.

<a href="http://www.whatsontv.co.uk/reality/eurovision-2010/news/jedward-reveal-plans-to-shave-trademark-quiffs/12427tag:news.google.com,2005:cluster=http://www.whatsontv.co.uk/reality/eurovision-2010/news/jedward-reveal-plans-to-shave-trademark-quiffs/12427Sat, 09 Apr 2011 09:11:19 GMT 00:00″>Jedward reveal plans to shave trademark quiffs

Brits sadly lacking in the 40 super-rich giving away fortunes

Forty billionaires have pledged to give half their fortunesto charity through a campaign established by Microsoftboss Bill Gates and financier Warren Buffett.

New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg and film mogul George Lucas are among the super-rich donors.Others have chosen to remain anonymous, but most of Britain’s billionaires are conspicuousby their absence.

Only supermarkettycoon Lord Sainsbury has signed the Giving Pledge.

It’s better to give: U.S. multi-billionaires Bill Gates and Warren Buffett have encouraged a team of 40 fellow billionaires to donate half their wealth to charity

Although we don’t have wealth on the American scale, there are said to be coincidentally40 peoplein this country who are worth more than