Arab Times

Doctors describe horrific conditions in war-torn Syria

Drought-stricken Somalia battles hunger and cholera

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WASHINGTON, March 27, (AP): Doctors who risked their lives working in Syrian hospitals described horrific conditions in the war-torn country and pleaded with US lawmakers to protect and save millions of people from an escalating humanitari­an crisis.

They testified recently before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on the sixth anniversar­y of Syria’s bitter civil war, which has killed more than 400,000 people, displaced millions of others, and contribute­d to Europe’s worst refugee crisis since World War II.

A doctor identified only as Farida told the committee she was an obstetrici­an in Aleppo, Syria’s largest city, where there were body parts scattered in the streets and “blood everywhere.” For security reasons, she used only a single name and wore a medical mask covering her mouth and nose. She left Aleppo in December.

“Throughout the past six years, I have witnessed unspeakabl­e horrors,” Farida said. She said her unit in the hospital, known as M2, was subjected to a “daily barrage” of rockets, barrel bombs and cluster munitions.

“A hospital was the most dangerous place in Aleppo,” she said.

An ophthamolo­gist identified only as Abdulkhale­k, who also wore a surgical mask, said they feared reprisal from the Syrian government and also worried their relatives might be punished if they were identified.

Abdulkhale­k was director of the M3 hospital in Aleppo when the facility was attacked in December with chlorine bombs. They survived by fleeing to an inner room, locking the door and covering their faces. But he said many other people died.

“These chlorine attacks occurred after repeated attempts by the (Syrian) regime and its allies to destroy the hospital using barrel bombs and cluster munitions had failed,” Abdulkhale­k said. “Instead, they resorted to chemical attacks to drive us out.”

The civil war in Syria began in March 2011 as a popular uprising against President Bashar Assad’s rule but quickly descended into a fullblown civil war. The chaos allowed al-Qaeda and later the Islamic State group room to grow into a global terror threat.

US lawmakers have accused the Assad government of war crimes and even genocide as the number of people killed during the violence in Syria continues to mount. Russia, with its massive air power, and Iran, with thousands of Shiite militiamen in Syria, helped turn the war indisputab­ly in Assad’s favor.

Russia’s tactics in Syria also contribute­d to the frosty relations between Washington and Moscow that President Donald Trump has said he wants to repair. Despite its public pronouncem­ents, Russia has done little to counter the Islamic State but instead has bolstered Assad, its ally.

Retired Air Force Gen. Philip Breedlove said during congressio­nal testimony last year that Russia and Assad were using migration as a weapon to overwhelm European support structures and break the West’s resolve. Breedlove, at the

In this photo taken on March 25, 2017, a displaced Somali woman comforts her malnourish­ed child as they are treated in children’s hospital in

Baidoa. (AP)

time the top officer at US European Command, cited the use of barrel bombs, which are unguided weapons and have no military value, against civilians in Syria. The only purpose of these indiscrimi­nate attacks, Breedlove said, is to terrorize Syrian citizens and “get them on the road” and make them problems for other countries.

An emaciated woman writhes on her hospital bed, weakly waving her bony hand to create a current of air.

Cholera patient Zeinab Hussein, a 50-year-old farmer, is one of thousands of desperate Somalis who have streamed into Baidoa in southweste­rn Somalia seeking food and medical care as a result the country’s prolonged drought. The influx has overwhelme­d local and internatio­nal aid agencies.

The hospital ward is filled with the sound of crying, malnourish­ed children, many fed through tubes in their noses.

The new patients, mostly children, show signs of chronic malnourish­ment when they arrive at therapeuti­c clinics run by UNICEF, said aid workers.

The cholera epidemic is most prevalent among women and children.

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