Khaleej Times

Parents in frenetic search for children

- AFP

douma — Nidal had to unfold several little shrouds, all lined up on the concrete floor of the morgue of the hospital in Syria’s Douma, before recognisin­g the body of his daughter Farah.

She was among dozens of civilians killed on Monday in the latest wave of Syrian regime air strikes on the rebel-held Eastern Ghouta enclave, of which Douma is the main town.

At least nine of the victims were children, according to the Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights monitoring organisati­on. More than 300 people were wounded.

As more bodies were brought in from the chaos of the emergency room, Nidal knelt down near his lifeless daughter and cried — not just for her but also for the five other children he lost track of in the bombardmen­t.

Farah was killed in the town of Masraba and her body brought to Douma by paramedics, who have been completely overwhelme­d since the regime intensifie­d its strikes two weeks ago. “I have five other children I know nothing about, all five of them and their mother,” he sobbed, resting his hand on the black shroud his daughter was wrapped in.

“Is there a fridge to put her in?”, he asked.

A volunteer for the civil defence, an organisati­on known as the White Helmets, awkwardly looked for something to tell the bereaved father and eventually said: “May God reward you.”

Nidal later told that he managed to find his other children.

Douma hospital was full of distraught civilians: one father slapped his forehead after finding his two dead children, another erupted into tears as he discovered the body of his newborn.

Lost and wounded children also cried for their parents, others sat silently, rivulets of blood running down their faces whitened by dust from the strikes, as they received treatment.

Two of them sat next to each other on a cot, shellshock­ed and blood staining their fresh bandages. —

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