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A Foreign Face Beloved by Afghans of All Stripes

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A native of Turin, who was a debonair lawyer then retrained as a physiotherapist, is beloved as "Alberto" to the Afghan people. He runs the Red Cross Afghan Rehabilitation Center in Kabul, and is the most loved westerner in Afghanistan. Its a visible location, but in all these years of war it has never been attacked. In the tradition of the Red Cross founded in 1860 as a neutral entity, the Red Cross's orthopedic centers make no distinction by political affiliation and help combatants on all sides because only the name is asked, as well as civilians who have lost legs to landmines. About 90,000 people have received new limbs since 1988, and 70,000 revisit the centers each year for replacement or adjustment of their prostheses, which last an average of 2 to 3 years for adults and as little as 6 months for children. All the treatments, including overnight stays at the centers that can run for weeks, are free. About 10 million mines were strewn across the landscape in the Soviet invasion from 1979 to 1988. Because most of these mines have been cleared by the UN and charities like the Britain's Halo's Trust, patients now recieve help for congenital deformities, polio, tuberculosis, and accidents as well as other war injuries.

For the war ravaged areas like Afghanistan and the Gaza strip, the work of the Red Cross and the untold story of civilians caught in the wars.

12/25/2008

"Alberto" from Turin, Italy is the beloved among Afghan people for his work at the Red Cross Rehabilitation Center. In all the Orthopedic Centers of the Red Cross have fitted prostheses on 90,000 people who lost limbs to landmines placed in a cold war fought by western nations and their proxies, about a third of the injuries. The story of a surgeon in Gaza City who lost his wife and child to cross fire between militants and the Israelis.

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The other human face of Afghanistan and Pakistan that Admiral Mullen and young officers are paying attention to.

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