Mothers confront horror after 11 babies die in Senegal hospital fire
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[May 26, 2022] By
Bate Felix and Ngouda Dione
TIVAOUANE, Senegal (Reuters) - Diali Kaba's
mother woke her up on Thursday morning with terrifying news: there had
been a fire at the hospital in their town in Senegal where Kaba's
two-week-old daughter was being cared for, and 11 babies were dead.
The two women rushed to the hospital together and Kaba was allowed in to
find out if her child was among the victims, while her mother Ndeye Absa
Gueye waited anxiously outside.
Gueye said she heard about the fire at the Mame Abdou Aziz Sy Dabakh
hospital on Wednesday night but did not immediately realise it had taken
place inside the neonatal department. The news reached her early on
Thursday, striking terror into her heart.
"I have my grand-daughter here, she has been here for two weeks. I have
come to see if she is one of them," she said.
A few minutes later, Kaba emerged in tears. Her baby was among the dead.
The two women embraced, both weeping, until Kaba was helped into a car
and driven home to grieve.
Tivaouane, located about 120 km (75 miles) east of Senegal's capital
Dakar, is a busy road transport hub and holy city that regularly
attracts large numbers of Muslim pilgrims from all over the west African
country.
The city was slowly waking up to the shocking news of the 11 baby
deaths, which was confirmed late on Wednesday night by President Macky
Sall.
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Kaba, a mother of a ten-day-old baby, reacts as she sits outside the
hospital, where newborn babies died in a fire at the neonatal
section of a regional hospital in Tivaouane, Senegal, May 26, 2022.
REUTERS/Zohra Bensemra
"We all share this pain," said local resident Ousmane
Kane. "They (the mothers) suffered with the hope that their babies
would live. But we have to accept the will of Allah. He gave them
babies and took them back. The whole of Senegal is in mourning."
Health Minister Abdoulaye Diouf Sarr told private Senegalese TV
station TFM that preliminary investigations suggested a
short-circuit had caused the fire. Authorities provided no other
details about how the disaster unfolded.
Public health experts have repeatedly warned that many underfunded,
understaffed African hospitals had been stretched beyond their
capacities by the COVID pandemic, leaving them unable to maintain
acceptable safety standards.
The tragedy in Tivaouane comes after several other incidents at
Senegalese hospitals angered the nation.
In April, a woman died in labour along with her unborn baby after
hospital staff refused to perform a Caesarean section.
Last year, four newborn babies were killed by a fire at a hospital
in the northern town of Linguere, causing a national outcry.
(Writing by Estelle Shirbon)
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