Showing posts with label awareness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label awareness. Show all posts

Monday, September 12, 2011

Challenging the 'cycle' of child trafficking


Ride2Rescue: Around the world on two wheels

Published: September 11, 2011
http://tribune.com.pk/story/250137/ride2rescue-around-the-world-on-two-wheels/



Four Australian men try to break the cycle of child trafficking by cycling for this cause.

ISLAMABAD: What does cycling around the world have in common with child trafficking awareness? Not very much, except that it’s an innovative way to garner public attention towards a largely neglected cause. At least, that’s the purpose of Ride2Rescue (R2R)’s maiden mission. This group of four young Australian men, consisting of Daniel Seehusen, John Clark, Tim Holman and Aaron Turner, pledged to cycle 28,000 kilometres (km) from London to Melbourne over a 14-month period. With 8,586 km behind them as they reached Islamabad on August 31, R2R is determined to spread awareness and raise funds for the cause.
R2R claim that child trafficking is the world’s “third largest industry” after weapons and prostitution. Stories of violence, kidnapping and dengue fever in Pakistan haven’t deterred the cheery, determined group from cycling through the country. “Pakistan is a place of interest for us, as it is a nation that faces the affects of human and child trafficking,” says Clark. “Children are tricked and forced into a variety of dangerous circumstances, used for cheap labour, sexually exploited or used in more unique ways such as jockeys for camel racing.”
Proceeds raised from funds will go towards child counselling centres in various countries in Asia, Africa and South America through World Vision Australia, their major supporter. Musician Sting and his wife Trudie are among recent celebrities to endorse the cause (Seehusen worked as a caregiver to their boys in London) and in a statement on the R2R website, the couple have stated, “We are proud to be able to support the amazing Ride2Rescue London to Melbourne cycle trip. Child trafficking is a global problem and one of humanity’s most terrible crimes, and one which should be exposed and tackled as a matter of urgency.”
Instead of crossing over to Balochistan (the group was rigorously interrogated at the Iran-Balochistan border and advised not to enter) as was their original intention, the cyclists had to catch a boat from Bandar Abbas in Iran to Dubai, where they caught a flight to Islamabad — a city they smilingly describe as “a different world”. Their three days in the city have included playing sports with underprivileged children, a visit to a school in a slum area and meeting local activists.
Interestingly, the group ran into a group of Dutch cyclists along the Karakorum Highway. R2R then departed on a three-day bike ride to Lahore via the Grand Trunk Road, camping along the way. They plan to remain in the city for a few days, where they are scheduled to visit a child trafficking centre, before entering India via the Wagah border. The cyclists will continue their journey through Nepal, Tibet, China, Laos, Cambodia, Thailand and Malaysia, and then continue by boat from Bali to Australia for the final leg of the cycling tour ending in their native Melbourne. Seehusen, who stopped shaving from the first day of R2R’s journey, plans to get rid of his substantial beard once they reach Melbourne to mark the occasion.
Dressed in navy polo shirts with sponsors’ logos, atop worn-out Turin bicycles (25 punctures since London and counting) laden with trusty camping gear, the cyclists have attracted curious crowds while passing through local villages from Switzerland and Serbia and across the Middle East. Clark describes the unbelievable hospitality they experienced in Turkey and Iran, where civilians “invite you to their homes for food or to sleep.”
Despite this welcome, the majority of their nights have passed cheerfully under a tent, as well as in mosques, and alongside rivers. The cyclists have no idea where they are spending their next night and remain undaunted. “Most people are blown away that we’re riding so far, it’s a bit of a laugh really. They get pretty impressed,” says Clark modestly.
Ride2Rescue receives support from World Vision Australia and welcomes donors to contribute online at ride2rescue.org

Published in The Express Tribune, September 12th,  2011.

Sunday, March 13, 2011

Breast Cancer In Pakistan (from ABCD Lady magazine, 2010)





Issue 71, July 2010





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Commentary
By Laaleen Khan
Breast Cancer in Pakistan
(Note from author: I am not a physician, so this piece should not be construed as medical advice or scientific fact.)
1 in 8 women has breast cancer in America.
1 in 22 women has breast cancer in India.
1 in 5 in women has breast cancer Pakistan.
Pakistani women have the highest rates of Breast Cancer among all Asian populations. They get the disease at a far younger age than women in Europe and the United States, often have larger lesions and are more prone to metastatic cancers.
In 2004, the Pink Ribbon Campaign in Pakistan discovered the following horrifying facts:
- Breast cancer is the most common cancer in Pakistani females, representing more than 1/3 of female cancers and about 1/4 of all malignancies.
- Approximately 35% of Pakistani women are likely to suffer from breast cancer at some point in their lives.
- More than 90,000 of the 1 million global cases of breast cancer are from Pakistan, and about 50% are from Punjab. About 10% of these women are diagnosed, but 75% do not seek treatment and die within five years.
- As a result, there are only 2,250 women in Pakistan who are treated for breast cancer out of 90,000 cases yearly, with 40,000 annual deaths!
In India, it’s the second most common type of cancer among women, particularly in urban areas. Studies suggest there are between 75,000-100,000 reported cases a year. The question remains, why is there such a wide disparity among breast cancer incidences between India and Pakistan (1 in 22 vs. 1 in 5 in women over 40) when our countries have a shared border and history, not to mention similarities in women’s ages during childbirth, marriage and various elements in our socio-cultural landscape?
I may not be a doctor, but I’m certainly not stupid.
Ignorance plays a big role in breast cancer diagnosis that’s too late to be effective. There are social taboos at work too. If you were to go for a routine mammogram, for instance, the receptionist of the radiology lab would gaze at you with pity, thinking you have a tumor rather than assuming you were a conscientious person getting a routine checkup (I’m speaking from experience). That’s the whole problem. There shouldn’t be something obviously wrong when you go—it ought to be a normal part of age-appropriate preventive care, just like annual gynecological and dental checkups.
Elsewhere in the world, particularly the United States and Europe, women are expected to get preventive care, such as mammograms and pap smears and no one bats an eyelid. Kylie Minogue, Sheryl Crowe, Cynthia Nixon, Christina Applegate and Anastacia have publicized their experiences with breast cancer and have become fund-raising advocates. After treatments, they’ve continued with their successful careers and made magazine covers. Such strong attitudes are inspirational. However, while Canadian-Indian Lisa Ray recently publicized her fight with multiple myeloma, other South Asian celebrities haven’t seemed to have followed her example.
In Pakistan, it’s often unheard of to get yourself checked unless you have a noticeably hard lump and are forced by family members to consult a doctor. Breast cancers often go undetected for so long that the majority of silent sufferers already have stage 3 or 4 cancer by the time they are diagnosed. In 2008, a mere 953 cases of breast cancer were recorded by Imran Khan’s Shaukat Khanum Memorial Cancer Hospital in Lahore (five of these cases were in men).
This is purely conjecture and, again, I am not a doctor, but Pakistan’s national pastime of carnivorous feasting couldn’t help. Even vegetable dishes on Pakistani menus invariably include an unhealthy dose of red meat: aloo gosht (potatoes and meat), anyone? Trying to find a vegetarian snack in a cafĂ© is a challenge when chicken is virtually regarded as one.
When it comes to reproduction, marriage between first cousins is still a common practice here, too. It’s common knowledge that the highest reported rates in the world are among Ashkenazi Jews, who have a genetic mutation that has been reproduced via inter-marriages within their race. Maybe there’s a similar mechanism at work in Pakistan.
Also, many harmful pesticides and herbicides banned internationally are cheaply disposed of in developing countries and have been identified as human or animal carcinogens. One of my childhood memories from the 1980s is quizzically watching cheesy TV commercials for chemical pesticides and fertilizers, where kissans(Punjabi farmers) using their magical sona urea (a form of fertilizer) cheerfully danced bhangra while singing the merits of profit-reaping cheap pesticides (DDT) in lieu of natural (albeit smelly) cow manure.
Environmental pollution, too, plays a significant role, creating dioxin, one of the most toxic chemicals in the world and a breast carcinogen to boot. Dioxin is even found in human breast milk and passed onto infants before they’ve left the womb. There are other, more controversial ways to protect fetuses and these involve genetic testing and treatments via IVF in women carrying a breast cancer gene.
I have to admit, I’m somewhat skeptical when doctors use the term “survival” for cancer success rates. I used to think it meant a long, healthy lifetime instead of just five years.
When it comes down to it, it’s ignorance, fear and denial that are the real killers.


http://www.abcdlady.com/2010-07/art7.php
Laaleen Khan is a media entrepreneur and mother. Born and raised in Lahore, Pakistan, she spent her early childhood and collegiate years in the United States and is a resident of Islamabad.

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