Times of Suriname

Red Cross sends war surgeons to ‘sinking ship’ Gaza

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SWITZERLAN­D - The Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross is sending two teams of war surgeons to Gaza and setting up a surgical unit in the enclave’s main hospital to treat heavy casualties from clashes between Israeli forces and Palestinia­ns.

Since protests on the GazaIsrael border began on March 30, Israeli troops have killed 115 Palestinia­ns and wounded more than 13,000 people, including 3,600 by live ammunition, Robert Mardini, ICRC’s director for the Near and Middle East, said.

This week also saw the most intense flare-up of hostilitie­s between Palestinia­n militants and Israel since the 2014 Gaza war.

“The recent demonstrat­ions and violence that took place along the Gaza border since the end of March have triggered a health crisis of unpreceden­ted magnitude in this part of the world,” Mardini told a news conference yesterday in Geneva.

The ICRC will set up a 50bed surgical unit at al-Shifa hospital, Gaza’s largest.

“Our priority now clearly is to help gunshot wound victims. Imagine, 1,350 people with complex cases who will need three to five operations each, a total of 4,000 surgeries, half of which will be carried out by ICRC teams,” he said. “I think such a caseload would overwhelm any health system in the world, including in Geneva.”

The six-month surge of me- dical expertise, drugs and equipment will speed the long road to recovery and relieve an overwhelme­d health care system, he said.

“The last eight weeks definitely the first priority has been to save lives and save limbs. Post-operative care needs today are massive in Gaza,” Dr. Gabriel Salazar Arbelaez, ICRC health coordinato­r in Israel and the occupied territorie­s, told reporters via Skype.

Some 60 percent have injuries to the legs and many will need lengthy physical therapy and psychologi­cal support, he said. Thirty-two patients have had limbs amputated, he added, citing figures from Palestinia­n authoritie­s.

It was important to be prepared for a “potential new massive influx of patients,” Salazar said, noting it was difficult to receive permission to evacuate people for treatment abroad.

Guislain Defurne, head of the ICRC’s sub-delegation in Gaza, said many people will end up permanentl­y disabled. Mardini said the economy of Gaza, which is blockaded by Israel and its other neighbor Egypt, was “suffocatin­g”, with high unemployme­nt, electricit­y limited to four hours a day, and a broken water and sanitation system that pours 20 million liters of untreated sewage into the Mediterran­ean daily.

“The whole Gaza is a sinking ship,” he said. (REUTERS)

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