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Fear and Grief Follow Refugees to Idomeni

Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) doctor Conor Kenny writes from Idomeni, Greece, where more than 10,000 refugees are trapped at the border with Macedonia.

Written by Conor Kenny Published on Read time Approx. 3 minutes
Migrants and refugees crowd the tracks of a railway station used as a makeshift camp at the northern Greek border point of Idomeni, Greece, on Thursday, May 5, 2016. AP Photo/Gregorio Borgia

Before I could see him, I could hear his screams coming toward us through the fabric of the field clinic tent. Carried in a standard issue dark thermal blanket by four young men, he was in tears, screaming and writhing in agony. We placed him immediately on our assessment bench. It was clear that this was an emergency.

My initial thoughts – based on his extreme distress – were that it was a surgical problem like a kidney stone or perforation somewhere in the gut. However, during the assessment of his airway it was obvious he was forcibly trying to swallow his tongue, actively holding his breath at the same time. His oxygen levels began to fall. His friends each took hold of one limb to control the forcible kicking and lashing out – preventing him from hitting other structures in the clinical area and causing significant harm to himself. It was impossible to calm him down.

Instead, he became more and more agitated, screaming incoherently. His friends then explained to our cultural mediator that he – Hamza, aged 22* – had just been informed his sister was killed in an airstrike in Syria. Here in Idomeni, he was so stricken with grief that he was now trying to seriously harm himself.

When I first arrived here this might have shocked me, or at least made me feel slightly surprised. But now it doesn’t.

This is not the first time MSF in Idomeni have treated a patient with a strong physical reaction to the bombings in Syria. Take, for example, the 68-year-old lady from Aleppo who is often carried into our clinic with fainting episodes following the loss of a family member in the bombing campaign of late April. Our investigations show no medical reason for these episodes.

Similarly, a seven-year-old boy who remains incontinent of urine four months after watching his father shot by a sniper is also “medically well.” We schedule an appointment with our psychological team and try to arrange clothing and nappies. Yet clearly there is a significant underlying issue here. As doctors working in the Idomeni field hospital, my colleagues and I are increasingly finding ourselves working with the psychological impact of the shelling in Syria. People do not leave these experiences behind when they flee for their lives; these things are inescapable. They follow them, like a shadow.

The people we treat have managed to escape a war zone, where bombing civilians and hospitals are a common occurrence now – as was devastatingly demonstrated last week in Aleppo.

Migrants and refugees line up for food at the northern Greek border point of Idomeni, Greece, Monday, May 2, 2016. (AP Photo/Gregorio Borgia)

Migrants and refugees line up for food at the northern Greek border point of Idomeni, Greece, Monday, May 2, 2016. (AP Photo/Gregorio Borgia)

The camp in the north of Greece on the border with FYROM has formed around an international freight train station for goods and a cattle slaughterhouse. Accommodating over 10,000 refugees and migrants, these people live in constant fear.

They escape only to be confronted with a new challenge here at Idomeni. The camp in the north of Greece on the border with FYROM [the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia] has formed around an international freight train station for goods and a cattle slaughterhouse. Accommodating more than 10,000 refugees and migrants, the camp is home to people who live in constant fear. Fear of the unknown. Fear of receiving the worst news from home – will the next bomb in Syria kill somebody they love? The genuine fear of being sent back.

The distress and frustration here is palpable. For Hamza, we had to prescribe relaxants. An extreme response – used as a last resort. But in this case, he was causing himself serious physical harm and with many women and young children inside, we had no other option. We kept him in the clinic for observation and spent time listening to his story before referring him to one of our psychologists.

I hope he will do well. But to be honest, I don’t know what will happen to him as time goes on. Nobody knows what will happen to him, or indeed anyone stuck in Idomeni. It seems they are trapped in no-man’s land. As one patient told me, “We are dying here, just like we were in Syria, but slower.”

This article was originally published by Doctors Without Borders (MSF) and is reprinted here with permission.

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