
UN Warns Of Rising Deportations Of Haitian Mothers And Newborns From Dominican Republic
According to the UN migration agency, IOM, recent weeks have seen an increase in the deportation of women, including those who are pregnant or breastfeeding, as well as children and newborn babies.
The agency has emphasised the heightened risks these groups face being returned to Haiti, where access to basic services remains severely limited.
On Tuesday alone, IOM staff at the Belladère border crossing in Haiti received 416 deportees, including 11 pregnant women and 16 women who are still breastfeeding.
Meeting the needs
'While IOM teams are not present during the deportation process itself, their efforts focus on the needs of deportees upon arrival, many of whom arrive in precarious and highly vulnerable conditions, often without any resources,' said UN Spokesperson Stéphane Dujarric, speaking in New York.
He explained that IOM provides immediate humanitarian assistance, including food, water, and hygiene kits, as well as first aid, medical referrals, and psychosocial support.
Special attention is given to maternal health, and temporary places to live are arranged for women who are breastfeeding when necessary, he added.
Worsening conditions
Mr. Dujarric also updated on the situation in Haiti, where rising violence and recent funding cuts are undermining essential services and worsening the humanitarian situation, particularly in the Centre Department.
Escalating violence on the part of armed groups has triggered mass displacement, with more than 51,000 people, over half of them children, fleeing recent attacks. Many are now stranded at makeshift sites or seeking safety in other regions.
No safety inside hospitals
He noted that the University Hospital of Mirebalais – a major referral facility with about 300 beds – has suspended operations following a wave of insecurity in the area.
'Armed attacks, a mass prison break and the destruction of public infrastructure forced the hospital to gradually shut down. Before its closure, it served nearly 850 patients each day, including through maternal care and advanced cancer treatment,' he said.
Meanwhile, two other hospitals in the area – St. Therese in Hinche and Albert Schweitzer Hospital in Artibonite – are now coming under increased strain and face critical shortages, including oxygen and emergency medical kits.
Since the closure of the University Hospital in Mirebalais, they have treated more than 200 patients for gunshot wounds, strokes, suspected cholera and malnutrition.
'St. Therese alone has received more than 3,500 internally displaced people – tripling its outpatient caseload,' he said.
The UN Children's Fund (UNICEF) and humanitarian partners are working to relieve pressure on the health system in Centre Department.
Mobile clinics are being deployed to reach 30,000 people in host communities and displacement camps, in coordination with the Haitian authorities and the Catholic charity Caritas.
Humanitarians are seeking $908 million to support nearly four million people in Haiti this year. Only six per cent of the funding, $57 million, has been received to date.

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Otago Daily Times
a day ago
- Otago Daily Times
Obituary: dedicated doctor and military man
BRIGADIER BRIAN MCMAHON Brigadier Brian McMahon was an impatient man: he did not suffer fools gladly, nor did he appreciate obstacles being placed in the way of his vital work. His resentment of delay was not born of an inherently grumpy nature: it was driven by a desire to get things done. Brig McMahon achieved an enormous amount in his 95 years, and the number of people and organisations grateful for his efforts are legion. A devoted resident of Dunedin, he was always jetting off here, there and everywhere to help people, be it Vietnam, Fiji or all points in between. As a doctor, a military man and as an administrator, Brig McMahon earned the respect and the thanks of many. Brian Thomas McMahon was born in Dunedin on December 1 1929, the son of Thomas and Dulcie McMahon, and was brought up in Oamaru and Dunedin, attending four different Catholic primary schools. When he reached secondary school young Brian McMahon began to flourish academically and show great promise for the future. He thrived at Otago Boys' High School — perhaps unsurprisingly, given he had been born just 300m away. He never forgot what he owed to his school. As well as being a keen old boy, always available for anything the school needed, in later life he served as life governor of the OBHS Old Boys' Society from 2000 to 2017. "OBHS encouraged us to have ambitions and I am sure that most of us were ambitious," Brig McMahon wrote in 2018. "Most of the boys survived to acquire an education. They also acquired other less tangible things that were equally important and long-lasting. Making friends, learning to live a community life, retaining individuality, yet moulding it to harmonise with others. "Somehow we had to learn how to accept success with modesty, and defeat and failure with good grace." From Otago Boys' Brian McMahon ventured down the hill and enrolled at the University of Otago to study medicine. In 1955 he graduated MB ChB, having made many life-long friends while at Dunedin Medical School. It was during his time in placement on the wards he met the rock of his life, nurse Joan Margaret Palmer (known as Margaret). The couple married at St Bernadettes, Dunedin, the following year, and went on to have five children: Jennifer, Simon, Jeremy, Sean and Marcus. Margaret McMahon died in 2001: although Brig McMahon still had many productive years ahead of him, some of the light of his life left with his wife's death. After graduation the McMahons and their growing brood embarked on a peripatetic life as Dr McMahon took up a variety of placements in hospitals around New Zealand. Dr McMahon specialised in venereology but also trained in public health. 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Despite being officially "retired" Brig McMahon kept on working in military hospitals, and in particular forged close links with Fiji, another country he grew to love — he organised a family reunion in the Pacific nation shortly before his death and was determined to play a full part in the event despite suffering poor health. Notably, Brig McMahon became involved with the Pacific Leprosy Foundation Trust, serving as its chairman for a time and regularly offering his services in its facilities in the islands and South East Asia. The foundation now offers a scholarship in his name. Brig McMahon's service was well recognised with medals and awards, including being named a Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 1983. St John, which Brig McMahon was closely involved in, recognised him by making him a knight of the order. Perhaps the most prestigious and satisfying recognition came in 2011 when Brig McMahon was presented the Royal New Zealand Returned and Services' Association Anzac of the Year Award. He had the rare distinction of receiving two independent nominations for the award, which then Governor-General Sir Anand Satyanand said reflected the esteem with which he was held in the community. In part, his citation read: "He is a dedicated professional whose commitment and compassion shows through in his care to his fellow servicemen and women and their dependants, for those he has touched in his profession as a doctor, and for those he has touched in aid activities in Vietnam and the Pacific Islands." After retiring from the defence force Brig McMahon returned to Dunedin, to work initially as medical superintendent at Wakari Hospital, before moving to the same role at Dunedin Hospital. Colleagues said that Brig McMahon's no-nonsense approach and wealth of knowledge was second to none. 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He was the inaugural patron of the University of Otago Medical School Brain Health Research Centre, and was the chairman of the campaign which helped raise $3 million to establish a neurosurgery chair at the university — he had been a surgical registrar at the Dunedin Hospital neurosurgery unit in the late 1950s. Brig McMahon, who had always loved music, was an enthusiastic member of the Dunedin RSA choir. In his final years, as well as being involved in many voluntary organisations, Brig McMahon took great delight from his daily attendance at the Moana Pool gym: he exercised there for 28 years, until he turned 95. A sharp wit with a wonderful turn of phrase, Brig McMahon touched the lives of all those he came into to contact with. Brig Brian McMahon died in Dunedin on March 13, aged 95. — Mike Houlahan

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RNZ News
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