From: El PaĆ­s

ID:228467
Date:2009-10-06 05:38:00
Origin:09SANAA1832
Destination:VZCZCXYZ0024

RR RUEHWEB

DE RUEHYN #1832/01 2790538
ZNY CCCCC ZZH
R 060538Z OCT 09
FM AMEMBASSY SANAA
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC 2943
INFO RUEHZM/GULF COOPERATION COUNCIL COLLECTIVE
RUEHRL/AMEMBASSY BERLIN 0108
RUEHLO/AMEMBASSY LONDON 0267
RUCPDOC/DEPT OF COMMERCE WASHINGTON DC
RUEATRS/DEPT OF TREASURY WASHDC
RUEAUSA/DEPT OF HHS WASHDC
RUEKJCS/SECDEF WASHINGTON DC

C O N F I D E N T I A L SANAA 001832 
 
SENSITIVE 
SIPDIS 
 
DEPT FOR NEA/ARP ANDREW MACDONALD 
 
E.O. 12958: DECL: 10/06/2019 
TAGS: PGOV, SOCI, ECON, PREL, UK, GM, YM 
SUBJECT: TALE OF TWO HOSPITALS HIGHLIGHTS ROYG'S MISPLACED 
FISCAL PRIORITIES 
 
Classified By: Ambassador Stephen A. Seche for reasons 1.4(b) and (d) 
 
1. (C) SUMMARY: The stark contrast between Yemen's newest 
medical facility -- the Sana'a Defense Compound Hospital -- 
originally built as the president's personal hospital, and 
the country's oldest -- the Aden Republican Hospital -- 
highlights a troubling sense of the ROYG's fiscal priorities 
as the national budget crisis deepens, and points to its 
emphasis on regime preservation over meaningful development. 
The dilapidated state of the 64 year-old Aden Republican 
Hospital, a 300-bed facility without a single functioning 
x-ray machine, has become a source of daily humiliation and 
persisent anti-northern sentiment among Aden residents, 
according to hospital officials.  The Ministry of Health has 
ignored modest requests for additional funds to maintain 
equipment, buy basic supplies, and re-paint the hospital 
walls.  By contrast, the ROYG self-financed the 
state-of-the-art, USD eight million Sana'a Defense Compound 
Hospital and, only at the urging of the president's personal 
physician, agreed to open up the hospital to a handful of top 
military commanders and selected civilian patients from local 
hospitals.  Like many reforms in the political sphere, the 
need for development in Aden, Yemen's "second city," remains 
glaringly obvious and lacking in presidential attention.  END 
SUMMARY. 
 
ADEN HOSPITAL: 300 BEDS, NO NEW MONEY 
------------------------------------- 
 
2. (SBU) The disparity between two Yemeni hospitals ) one 
the country's oldest and the other its newest ) sheds light 
on elements of daily life in southern Yemen that have long 
contributed to anti-northern sentiment.  The Aden Republican 
Hospital is the governorate's largest public hospital, 
personally inaugurated by Queen Elizabeth II in 1954 and last 
renovated in 1985.  Even by Yemen's low public health 
standards, the Aden hospital, which local residents describe 
as Yemen's most modern prior to unification, stands out as a 
symbol of central government neglect.  Unlike centers in 
Sana'a, Mar'ib, and other regions with strong tribal 
representation, the Aden hospital receives only an irregular 
trickle of Ministry of Health funding and no foreign donor 
assistance.  ROYG officials in Sana'a describe modernizing 
the Aden Hospital as a high priority, but mostly within the 
context of preparations for the Gulf Cup of Nations soccer 
tournament, which Aden will host in early 2010.  "If we don't 
fix it soon, the Aden hospital will be a major embarrassment 
for the government," Faris al-Sanabani, President Saleh's 
personal secretary, told EconOff in September.  
XXXXXXXXXXXX claims that "for 10 years 
the government has promised us money to buy new equipment or 
paint the walls, but so far...nothing." 
 
3. (SBU) The Aden hospital, whose hallways and operating 
rooms evoke a sci-fi writer's post-apocalyptic vision more 
than a modern public health facility, lacks a single 
functioning x-ray machine and relies on two first-generation 
technology, Hungarian-built sterilization machines to 
disinfect material from over 300 beds.  "The hospital itself 
paid for the only renovation we've completed since 1985 -) 
plugging holes in the ceiling to keep out rats and 
cockroaches.  Even that failed to keep the pests out,"  
XXXXXXXXXXXX told EconOff  
XXXXXXXXXXXX.  The fact that the hospital must send patients to 
Sana'a for most laboratory tests and anything beyond basic 
surgical procedures has become a source of humiliation in 
daily life in Aden, according to staff physicians.  
XXXXXXXXXXXX 
XXXXXXXXXXXX.  Hospital 
officials showed EconOff a wish list of easily procurable 
items, including bedpans and stethoscopes, that Aden hospital 
officials claim the Ministry of Health has ignored since the 
document was compiled in 2001.  In the absence of funding 
from the ROYG, the hospital has begun to charge patients USD 
20-40 for some operations to pay for basic medical supplies, 
costs not passed on to patients in other public hospitals. 
 
SANA'A HOSPITAL: 16 BEDS, EIGHT MILLION DOLLARS 
----------------------------------------------- 
 
4. (C) In stark contrast to the Aden hospital stands the 
spotless, newly-modernized USD eight million Defense Compound 
Hospital in Sana'a, self-financed by the ROYG and completed 
in May 2009.  The hospital, headed by Dr. Hisham al-Zubairi, 
Saleh's personal physician, is staffed by German and Indian 
doctors and equipped with state-of-the-art orthopedic, ear 
nose and throat (ENT), and 3-D medical imagery technology. 
The facility, located on the grounds of the new Ministry of 
Defense complex, was originally built to serve as Saleh's 
personal hospital.  (Note: Saleh was treated at the Sana'a 
Defense Compound Hospital following his June 2009 spill from 
a mountain bike.  End Note.)  XXXXXXXXXXXX 
convinced Saleh to open up the hospital to a handful 
of top military commanders and criticial condition cases from 
local hospitals so that physicians would not grow bored or 
lose their dexterity in the operating room.  XXXXXXXXXXXX  Despite the 
widened patient pool, the hospital seemed largely vacant 
during a September 27 visit by EconOff, filled with three 
floors of bored-looking nurses and smiling doctors with 
little to do except wait for new cases to arrive. 
 
5. (C) The new hospital is not without its detractors, even 
within government circles.  XXXXXXXXXXXX "wasted" on the Sa'ada conflict
 when a "few 
thousand dollars to the Aden hospital would go much farther." 
 XXXXXXXXXXXX 
 
COMMENT 
------- 
 
6. (C) The ROYG's lavish funding of the new military hospital 
in Sana'a, and its lack of attention to the Aden hospital, 
symbolizes a fiscal prioritization trend that could worsen if 
the budget crisis deepens: regime preservation rather than 
meaningful economic development for the Yemeni people.  Few 
of Yemen's urban centers are more devoid of presidential 
patronage, foreign assistance, or tribal largesse than Aden. 
Development needs in Aden, like political reforms in southern 
Yemen, remain glaringly obvious and easily implementable if 
President Saleh had the will to see them through.  In the 
political sphere, many local observers have long pointed to 
the continued presence of a handful of Aden-based military 
leaders, widely considered responsible for the worst 
instances of corruption and post-unity land grabs, as a major 
irritant in north-south relations.  In the economic sphere, 
the ROYG's neglect of essential social institutions in Aden, 
such as the hospital, is seen as a symptom of Saleh's 
unwillingness to take even basic measures to address southern 
grievances.  As the contruction of the new Sana'a military 
hospital demonstrates, the ROYG's budget crisis does not 
apply to items that contribute to regime preservation and the 
Saleh family's personal welfare.  END COMMENT. 

SECHE