Gulf News

War-ravaged Mosul school turns into makeshift hospital

With school lessons unlikely to resume anytime soon, several former pupils help the medical staff

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Fifteen-year-old Mohammad enthusiast­ically helps the staff of a makeshift hospital set up in the bullet-scarred school in west Mosul where he himself studied before terrorists seized Iraq’s second city.

Daesh used the school as part of its programme of indoctrina­tion until it lost control of the area during a major Iraqi offensive launched last month, and it is now used to treat people wounded in the ongoing battle for the western side of the city.

Like many buildings in Mosul, the school bears the signs of warfare.

In addition to being pockmarked with bullets, most of the windows are broken, walls are cracked and the floor is littered with bullet casings.

The entrance hall has been transforme­d into an emergency room, which is stocked with only limited equipment but still allows for first aid to be administer­ed to the wounded and sick.

One young man lies on a narrow bed, his face pale and tired.

“A sniper (from Daesh) fired at him but missed, so he started to run, and the sniper shot again and hit him,” says Fathi Waad, one of the victim’s relatives.

“This is the third time that someone in the family has been hit by a sniper,” he adds.

Each day, the hospital looks after around 100 patients, both civilians and security personnel, often the victims of gunshot wounds, says Aqil Karim, a medic from the elite Counter-Terrorism Service.

A dust-covered red pickup suddenly stops in front of the school to deliver a semi-conscious old man whose foot has been injured. Unlike the previous patient, he is not the victim of violence, but rather of an accident, and he is also suffering from dehydratio­n.

As soon as he arrives, he is carried to a bed, where his wound is washed, disinfecte­d and dressed.

Treating him is just as important as tending to those wounded by war in a city where the fighting has destroyed many medical facilities. More than 200,000 Iraqis have fled west Mosul since Iraqi forces began the assault to retake the area on February 19, the government says, but hundreds of thousands more are still in danger inside the city.

With school lessons unlikely to resume anytime soon, several former pupils have returned to the building to help the medical staff. Indifferen­t to the sounds of gunfire and explosions outside, one of them rushes around helping out where he can, dressed in a tracksuit with a blue hood.

 ?? AFP ?? Iraqi soldiers tend to a civilian who was injured by Daesh terrorists at a school-turned-hospital in western Mosul, on Friday.
AFP Iraqi soldiers tend to a civilian who was injured by Daesh terrorists at a school-turned-hospital in western Mosul, on Friday.

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