Earthquake orphans under guard to stop child trafficking
Agencies warn of hospital kidnap threat in Pakistan Criminal gangs and childless couples blamed
Declan Walsh, Islamabad
Relief agencies in Pakistan fear children separated from their families in the post-earthquake chaos are at risk from human traffickers and childless couples.
Thousands of injured children have been flown by helicopter from the areas worst hit by the October 8 quake which devastated Kashmir and North West Frontier province. Many are in the Pakistan Institute of Medical Sciences (Pims) hospital in Islamabad. Its director said yesterday that a policewoman was posted outside the ward, and security guards vetted visitors at the hospital entrance, after reported attempts to abduct children.
No child may leave without stringent checks, said Dr Anjum Javed. "We check their parents' national ID cards with the police and, if necessary, with the intelligence agencies," he said.
An unknown number of children arrive at hospitals unaccompanied because their parents are dead or lost, and aid agencies fear there are few safeguards to prevent strangers snatching them. "We are very worried," said Julia Spry-Leverton of Unicef. "We are urging the government to put measures in place to make sure this doesn't happen."
Amid the concerns for rescued children, there was a glimmer of hope for those people trying to rebuild their lives in the isolated areas devastated by the quake. The Pakistani president, Pervez Musharraf, proposed allowing Kashmiri residents to cross the ceasefire line dividing the province to help with reconstruction efforts. "We will allow every Kashmiri to come across the Line of Control and assist in the reconstruction effort," he said. India welcomed the proposal. "This is in line with India's advocacy of greater movement across the LoC for relief work and closer people-to-people contacts," said the foreign ministry.
Meanwhile, in the children's ward of Pims, the Guardian found Huma Kazmi, 12. Rescuers had pulled her from the rubble of her village school after three days without food or water. Her legs were broken and her wounds badly infected. The army flew her from Muzaffarabad to Pims. But when she came to a day later, there was a woman by her bed. "She said she was my aunt," said Huma yesterday. "She said: 'You are all alone here. Come to my house and I'll take care of you. There's another hospital nearby.'"
Huma did not know the woman, whom she described as young and wearing an orange shawl over a white shalwar kameez. But she knew she did not like her, and alerted staff. The woman fled. "We already suspected something was wrong," said the ward doctor, Irshad Khan. "It was not normal to want to take such a badly injured child home for treatment."
It is not the only case. In the next bed lay Jahangir Jamil, 10. An unknown man had tried to claim him. He was too traumatised by the earthquake to give any details, said Fozia Irum, a volunteer counsellor. "He weeps or shouts, or calls for his mother," she said. The man disappeared.
Dr Javed stressed that the threat of child abduction remained small - just seven of the 960 children at Pims were unaccompanied and all were carefully monitored. But the general issue has worried the authorities, keen to prevent the adoption dramas similar to those in south Asia after December's tsunami. In the most notorious case nine couples claimed an infant survivor known as "Baby 81" until a DNA test identified his real parents.
Adoption is uncommon in Pakistan, where orphans are easily cared for in family networks, but these may be strained following the earthquake .Every year hundreds of youngsters are smuggled to Middle Eastern countries for camel-racing jockeys. More than 400 minors were returned from the United Arab Emirates earlier this summer. Responding to the growing concern, the prime minister, Shaukat Aziz, ordered on Sunday that all earthquake orphans be registered and taken into government care. None would be put up for adoption. The International Committee of the Red Cross will try to reunite families over the coming months.
British relatives seeking information can contact the Pakistan High Commission's helplines on 020 7664 9284 or, 07960 277 670.