|
KOREA: Students open hearts and veins
|
|
|
Students
open hearts, and veins, to migrants A
group of people waited anxiously in line, Wednesday, as four Bangladeshi
men busily fried mixed dough with onion and mung beans to make the traditional
dish pyaju and two Vietnamese girls wrapped tempting dim sum. The
cards were to assist migrant workers undergoing medical treatment here.
In Korea, blood donors get official blood donation cards and in an emergency
can get blood for free with the card. On
the sidelines, migrant workers from Bangladesh, Vietnam, Malaysia and
Mongolia provided traditional food to those taking part in the donation
drive. There
are 500,000 foreign workers residing in Korea, but 30 percent of them
are illegal migrants who have no health insurance. "I
heard that many times when we need blood, not enough has been donated,
so we have to buy it," said Alam Mohammed, a 31-year-old man from
Bangladesh who spoke in English. He works at the Migrant Workers in
Korea office in Seongnam, Gyeonggi province. The group focuses on migrant
workers' rights and also runs a medical clinic for them. "I
regularly donate blood, and wanted to do so today because I felt sympathy
for foreign workers in need," said Ha Min-sun, a YBM student. Kang
Ho-young, a senior executive at YBM, said that last year's event collected
2,400 blood donation cards for both children's hospitals as well as
migrant workers. As many workers are from South Asia, which has been
hit by many natural disasters this year, the organizers decided to donate
all the cards to migrant workers. The
event will last until Dec. 3. and YBM will give a 10-percent discount
on course fees to its students who donate blood or cards. October 31, 2005
|