- Relieving Third World Debt, USCC, 9/89
Cleophas Banbabazi
Kyakatara, Western Uganda
I am a widow. I have three children. Of course, some of them get sick
now and then, sometimes they have worms, sometimes malaria, sometimes
they only catch a cold. Unfortunately, the hospitals are very far
away and when one of us gets sick we cannot travel there. There are
some small health centers in the near, but you have to pay for everything
there.
My oldest child has a liver problem they found at the health center.
But they did not give me any medicines. They just told me to feed
him sweets, such as sugar cane. It helps him a little bit.
Testimony given to the Austrian Service for
Development Co-operation (OED)
Debt Facts:
In Uganda, the government spends $3.00 per person annually on health
and education and $17.00 per person annually on debt repayments. One
of every five Ugandan children dies from preventable disease before
reaching the age of five.
Maria
Honduras
Maria is thirteen years old. She left home after her mother lost her
job as a cleaner in the government-run hospital. The government laid
off thousands of people because of austerity programs mandated by
the International Monetary Fund. Her father was unemployed and there
was not enough money to feed the whole family. She is now a prostitute
in Tegucigalpa. Maria has no other choice. She needs to eat and live.
Testimony provided by Trocaire, a Catholic
relief and development agency based in Ireland.
Debt Facts:
According to the 1998 United Nations Human Development Report (produced
before Hurricane Mitch), 50 percent of Hondurans lived below the poverty
line, 13 percent lacked access to safe water and sanitation, and 31
percent lacked access to health services. Oxfam International has
estimated that devastation from Hurricane Mitch is so great that it
will take ten years for Honduras to recover, that is, to return to
the levels of poverty and need described in the U.N. report. Meanwhile,
the government continues to service $4.1 billion in debt, $147.7 million
of which is owed directly to the U.S. government.
Zenithou
Niger
Sitting with her father on a wicker mat, three-year-old Zenithou has
dark curls and a face that's been destroyed. She's fighting a disease,
caused by ordinary mouth bacteria, that eats through her facial muscles,
tissue and bones. Her father, Ali, a sieve maker, had to sell 150
sieves before he had the money to take her to the hospital. He comforts
his daughter as best he can.
"When she's in pain she takes my hand and puts it against the part
of her face that hurts and says to me, 'Daddy, it hurts.' I just stroke
her and comfort her but my heart is thumping and thumping."
In Niger, Zenithou's country, there is no war, no famine just constant
crippling poverty. Children whose immune systems have been weakened
by chronic malnutrition have nothing with which to fight any disease.
Simple antibiotics and mouthwash may have saved Zenithou if her illness
had been caught early. Niger the poorest country in the world cannot
afford these luxuries.
From Bread for the World's 1999 Offering of Letters
Kit. Adapted from an article, "Suffering from Plague - The Plague
of Debt" in The Guardian, May 11, 1998.
Debt Facts:
Niger spends three times more money paying off its debt burden than
it spends on health and education. According to Oxfam International,
debt relief today would save 475,000 children in Niger.
For more information, contact the U.S. Catholic Conference Department
of Social Development and World Peace (phone 202-541-3199; website:
www.nccbuscc.org/sdwp)
or Catholic Relief Services (phone 410-625-2220; website: www.catholicrelief.org).
__________________________________
Office of Social Development & World Peace
United States Conference of Catholic Bishops
3211 4th Street, N.E., Washington, DC 20017-1194 (202) 541-3000