Posted by Unknown
Tuesday, June 11, 2013
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The additional income Taslima earned from being a garment factory
worker was supposed to pay for her three-year-old son's future
education.
But after sustaining a compound fracture to her pelvis and
back bone, Taslima is not sure when she will be able to work again. The
24-year-old was working on the 8th floor in a garment factory in Rana
Plaza when the building collapsed on 24th April 2013.
Taslima first
instinct was to hide herself under her sewing machine. As the roof came
crashing down on her sewing machine, Taslima's life was preserved
despite sustaining major injuries. It took rescuers about half a day to
pull her out of the rubble and send her to the Emergency Unit of the
National Orthopaedic Hospital in Dhaka. The death toll from the Savar
building collapse now stands at over 700 as rescue workers continue to
recover bodies from the rubble. So far, about 2,440 people have been
rescued.
"I don't know what will be. Who will look after my child?" Taslima said.
The
family was surviving on the income of Taslima's husband - a garage
worker - until two years ago. The couple hoped that the additional
income could help give their child an education and a better life.
"We
don't know whether she will be able to work or not...it will be really
tough for her to work in future," said Shamima Nasrin, a nurse at the
National Orthopaedic Hospital.
Save the Children, in partnership with
PLAN International, has set up helpdesks to help children affected by
the tragedy. Save the Children has also gathered information on children
affected by the disaster from bedside interviews with injured people
and form an information desk, and provided some limited assistance as
required. While few children were directly affected by the disaster, it
is clear that - as expected - significant numbers of children will be
indirectly affected as a result of the death or incapacity of their
parents.
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