The Southland Times

At Gaza protests, paramedics witness the toll Gaza

- Times

The first patients don’t come until 5.39pm. They crowd around the ambulance, choking on tear gas.

Israeli soldiers, just a few hundred metres away on the other side of the boundary fence, had fired a volley of hissing cans at the protesters.

Hussein al Sumeiri, a 31-yearold paramedic, hands out cotton wool treated with alcohol and saline for them to wipe their stinging eyes. One 10-year-old in jeans and a yellow T-shirt has tears streaming down his cheeks and is struggling for breath. He is brought inside the ambulance to be given oxygen. Sumeiri logs it as the day’s first injury.

Friday was the quietest protest day of the past eight weeks for the paramedics in ambulance No 414. The ‘‘Great March of Return,’’ as the demonstrat­ions have been dubbed, reached their peak Monday. Then, 62 Palestinia­ns were killed by Israeli soldiers, according to Gaza health authoritie­s, on the bloodiest day here since the 2014 war between Israel and the militant group Hamas, which controls the territory.

As the paramedics worked, the UN Human Rights Council was voting Friday to set up a probe of the killings in Gaza and accusing Israel of excessive use of force.

Medics like Sumeiri have witnessed the brunt of the violence. His ambulance treated more than 50 patients with gunshot wounds on Monday.

The medics have been in the line of fire themselves, with one paramedic among those killed on Monday. They list the names of several colleagues who have been shot.

The crowds are thin on Friday, swelling only after late-afternoon prayers, when several busloads arrive. It’s the first day of Ramadan, the holy month when Muslims fast between sunrise and sunset, and temperatur­es are near a sweat-inducing 100 degrees.

The medics are working on empty. At 5.45pm, the crowd runs from more tear gas, and Sumeiri gets out saline solution to wash the eyes of those who arrive. A teenager carrying a slingshot, his head wrapped in a traditiona­l Palestinia­n scarf, is brought in for oxygen. Another man is carried in barely conscious.

‘‘Close the door, close the door!’’ yells Sumeiri, and the ambulance pulls off to a field hospital.

As sunset nears, Sumeiri watches from the ambulance as Hamas leaders come to speak to the crowd. Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh says the demonstrat­ions have ‘‘shaken the pillars’’ of Israel’s 11-year ‘‘siege’’ of Gaza. Israel has accused Hamas of organising the protests and using them as cover to carry out attacks. Israel says at least 24 of those killed on Monday were militants.

Sumeiri and his driver, 31-year-old Ahmed al-Madhoun, have worked together throughout the unrest and say the use of force has been shocking. They both say it’s taken a psychologi­cal toll.

‘‘I notice when I’m talking to my neighbours or my family, I get angry easily,’’ said Sumeiri. It doesn’t compare to the stress of the 2014 war, though, when he spent his days in the ambulance worrying about his family’s safety as Gaza came under heavy air bombardmen­t from Israel and Hamas fired rockets back.

His family hasn’t been at the latest demonstrat­ions.

‘‘No, no, no,’’ he said. ‘‘It’s not safe.’’

The day closes with just 56 injuries across Gaza, largely from tear gas, though some gunshot wounds are reported.

Sumeiri’s brother-in-law calls to check.

‘‘A good day,’’ he reports back. ‘‘A day of gas.’’ – Washington Post

 ?? AP ?? Palestinia­n medics pray during a protest at the Gaza Strip’s border with Israel, left. At right, medic Hussain Al-Smairy checks on a man inside an ambulance.
AP Palestinia­n medics pray during a protest at the Gaza Strip’s border with Israel, left. At right, medic Hussain Al-Smairy checks on a man inside an ambulance.
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