Kuwait Times

Israel treating thousands of war-wounded Syrians

Syrians crossing into enemy territory - for help

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GOLAN HEIGHTS: Seven wounded Syrians - two children, four women and a man - waited in pain for darkness to fall to cross into enemy territory. Under the faint moonlight, Israeli military medical corps quickly whisked the patients across the hostile frontier into armored ambulances headed to hospitals for intensive care. It was a scene that has recurred since 2013, when the Israeli military began treating Syrian civilians wounded in fighting just a few kilometers away.

Israel says it has quietly treated 3,000 patients - a number that it expects to quickly grow as fighting heats up in neighborin­g Syria in the wake of a chemical attack and, in response, an unpreceden­ted US missile strike. While the numbers are a tiny fraction of the hundreds of thousands of dead and wounded in the six-year Syrian war, both doctors and patients say the program has changed perception­s and helped ease tensions across the hostile border.

Dr Salman Zarka, director of the Ziv medical center in the northern Israeli town of Safed, is a former colonel in the medical corps who served on the Syrian border. He said he “couldn’t then have imagined setting up a humanitari­an program for Syrians.” Now his hospital has delivered 19 Syrian babies and sends prescripti­ons with patients back into Syria. “All this makes it more human, more complicate­d,” Zarka said, adding that he worries about patients he knows on a first name-basis who have returned to Syria.

In Thursday night’s rescue, medical officers decided that two of the seven patients had wounds that were too urgent to wait and so radioed in a helicopter. Soldiers carried the two on stretchers beneath the whirring blades as the helicopter lifted off into the inky night sky. “We check their breathing, their pulse, their blood pressure - all their vital signs,” said Lt Omri Caspi, a medical officer. “We take a look at their injuries, we saw the cuts, we checked the chest, the heads, everything, and then we decide which treatment they need.” Just a few years ago, such scenes would have been unthinkabl­e. Israel and the government of Syrian President Bashar Assad were bitter enemies, and contact across the hostile lines of the divided Golan Heights was virtually nonexisten­t. Israel captured part of the Golan, a strategic plateau overlookin­g northern Israel, from Syria in the 1967 Mideast war. The outbreak of Syria’s civil war in 2011 has radically altered the area, though. The Syrian side of the Golan is now divided between government troops and a host of rebel groups.

Russian, Iranian and Lebanese Hezbollah forces have all entered the fighting to offer support to Assad’s beleaguere­d forces. Israel has largely stayed out of the fighting in Syria, which has claimed over 400,000 lives. But it has carried out a number of airstrikes on suspected weapons shipments to Hezbollah, a bitter enemy that is fighting alongside Syrian government forces. Tensions skyrockete­d this week after an alleged chemical weapons attack by the Syrian government killed dozens of people.

The US responded early Friday by launching 59 Tomahawk missiles at a Syrian air base- a dramatic escalation lauded by Sunni states, rebels and Israel but condemned by Assad, Russia and China. Israel’s newest patients started their treatment just as the American missiles struck, a little before dawn, less than 200 kilometers away inside Syria. Two Syrian patients shared their experience­s in Syria and Israel with The Associated Press as soldiers from the Israeli military supervised. The two spoke on condition of anonymity out of fear they or their families would be targeted in Syria if their stay in Israel is made public. — AP

 ??  ?? GOLAN HEIGHTS: An Israeli military medic talks to a badly wounded Syrian woman. Wounded Syrians crossed into Israeli controlled Heights for treatment. — AP
GOLAN HEIGHTS: An Israeli military medic talks to a badly wounded Syrian woman. Wounded Syrians crossed into Israeli controlled Heights for treatment. — AP

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