The Guardian

‘Born an orphan’: baby delivered as mother lay fatally injured

- Ruth Michaelson Jerusalem Additional reporting Reuters and Associated Press

Doctors in Gaza delivered a premature baby as her mother lay dying from head injuries sustained in an Israeli airstrike on Saturday. The girl was delivered via an emergency caesarean section at a hospital in Rafah.

The woman, Sabreen al-Sakani, was 30 weeks pregnant when her family home was hit by an airstrike in which her husband and their threeyear-old daughter also died.

“We managed to save the baby,” Ahmad Fawzi al-Muqayyad, a doctor at the Kuwaiti hospital in Rafah, told Sky News. “The mother was in a very critical condition. Her brain was exposed, so we saved one of the two.”

The baby would stay in hospital for three to four weeks, Dr Mohammad Salama, the head of the neonatal unit at the Emirati maternity hospital in Rafah, told news agencies on Sunday.

“After that we will see about her leaving, and where this child will go, to the family, to the aunt or uncle or grandparen­ts. Here is the biggest tragedy: even if this child survives, she was born an orphan,” he said.

The baby’s grandmothe­r later told reporters that she would take care of her. “She is a memory of her father. I will take care of her,” she said. “My son was also with them. My son became body parts and they have not found him yet. They have nothing to do with anything. Why are they targeting them? We don’t know why, how? We do not know.”

At least two-thirds of the more than 34,000 Palestinia­ns killed in Gaza since this war began have been women and children, according to the territory’s health ministry.

Another Israeli airstrike in Rafah on Sunday night killed 17 children and two women from an extended family, according to Palestinia­n health officials.

“Did you see one man in all of those killed?” said Saqr Abdel Aal, whose family were among the dead. “All are women and children. My entire identity has been wiped out with my wife, children and everyone.”

Mohammad al-Behairi said his daughter and grandchild were still under the rubble. “It’s a feeling of sadness, depression. We have nothing left in this life to cry for. What feeling shall we have? When you lose your children, when you lose the closest of your loved ones, how will your feeling be?” he said.

Asked about the casualties in Rafah, an Israeli military spokespers­on said various militant targets had been struck in Gaza.

More than half of Gaza’s 2.3 million people have crowded into Rafah, seeking shelter from the Israeli offensive that has laid waste to much of the Gaza Strip over the past six months.

Israel is threatenin­g to launch a ground offensive in Rafah, where the prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, has said fighters from the militant group Hamas must be eliminated in order to ensure Israel’s victory in the war.

Netanyahu has previously said that a date for a Rafah ground invasion has been set, but has yet to publicly present any plan to protect the people sheltering there.

 ?? ?? ▲ A medic at the Kuwaiti hospital in Rafah holds the newborn baby
▲ A medic at the Kuwaiti hospital in Rafah holds the newborn baby

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