Cape Times

‘This is a hell. It’s mass murder. Totally unfair’

- John Heilprin

GENEVA: French surgeon Jacques Beres has operated in war zones for 40 years, but he says the carnage in Syria is among the most horrific he has ever witnessed.

Beres smuggled himself into the battered Syrian city of Homs for two weeks in February, setting up a makeshift hospital in a home where he operated on 89 wounded in a span of 12 days. Many were elderly or children. He saved most of them, but nine died on the operating table.

At a meeting of human rights activists on Tuesday in Geneva, the 71-year-old Parisian – apparently the only Western doctor to get into Homs – spoke with passion about the bloodshed and the horrific conditions.

“This is a hell,” said Beres, a co-founder of Doctors Without Borders and Doctors of the World who has worked in war zones including Vietnam, Rwanda and Iraq. “It’s mass murder. It’s totally unfair. It’s unjustifia­ble.”

Beres crossed the border into Syria illegally from Lebanon to set up his operating table in an abandoned home with just three beds.

He said his biggest challenges were the basics: scarce electricit­y and finding enough room for stretchers.

Beres said that people in Homs, the heart of the Syrian rebellion, lived in despair despite their gratitude to journalist­s for telling the world of their plight.

“They say it’s good that you’re thinking about us, but they say it doesn’t give us food, medicine or weapons,” he told the Geneva Summit for Human Rights and Democracy.

The Syrian uprising began with mostly peaceful protests. As security forces violently suppressed them, killing thousands, the protests escalated into an armed insurrecti­on.

The UN refugee agency said 230 000 Syrians have fled their homes since the uprising against Assad’s regime began last year. Activist groups say the death toll for the 11-monthold uprising has surpassed 8 000.

Hadeel Kouki, a 20-year-old Syrian activist, told the group that she spent 52 days in prison after the Syrian military intelligen­ce summoned her for questionin­g. She had handed out leaflets at her university, urging fellow students to demonstrat­e.

“We have about 10 000 dead until now and the killing is constant. We have about 100 dead every day. This number includes a lot of children. They die in their homes,” said Kouki.

 ??  ?? CUTTING EDGE: French war surgeon Jacques Beres
CUTTING EDGE: French war surgeon Jacques Beres

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