Bangkok Post

No functionin­g hospitals in east Aleppo

Syrian govt bombings prevent trauma care

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BEIRUT: The remaining hospitals on the rebel-held side of Aleppo have been badly damaged and forced to stop providing care amid an intensifyi­ng bombardmen­t, according to the World Health Organisati­on (WHO).

Bombs launched by the Syrian government over the past three days seriously damaged two general hospitals that were providing trauma care in the warzone and hit the only children’s hospital, according to doctors, nurses and residents.

The destructio­n left more than a quarter-million people in eastern Aleppo without hospital care, the WHO said. It is unclear if the hospitals will be able to reopen.

“Although some health services are still available through small clinics, residents no longer have access to trauma care, major surgeries, and other consultati­ons for serious health conditions,” the WHO said in a statement issued on Sunday.

Dr Omar, the last neurosurge­on in eastern Aleppo, who declined to provide his full name out of fear for his safety, sounded desperate when reached at the height of the bombing on Friday.

“We no longer have hospitals to operate in,” he said. “You can’t imagine what it’s like living in Aleppo right now. It feels like we are living in hell. Our neighbourh­oods are in flames, and bombs are raining down from the sky. We urgently call on the internatio­nal community to send help.”

Humanitari­an agencies have described

the attacks on healthcare facilities as deliberate.

The rebel-held area of the city is surrounded by government forces and has run out of most food rations, medicines, bandages and fuel and has little water.

“The regime is trying to cut off the city,” said Abu Roma, who uses a nom de guerre and is a rebel commander with the Zinki group, which opposes President Bashar al-Assad of Syria.

“I would say the worst scenario is that we will be martyrs,” he said, referring to all those remaining in the rebel-held area.

Aleppo, the country’s largest city, has been divided since 2012, but the situation became markedly worse over the summer. In recent weeks, there had been a rare respite from air strikes on rebel-held districts, but that ended last week. Now it appears to both those fighting and civilians that the Syrian government has resolved to press forward regardless of the humanitari­an cost, and to gamble that Western countries, particular­ly the United States, will not stop them. President Barack Obama has never been keen on military action in Syria, and the incoming US president, Donald Trump, is more sympatheti­c to Russia, which has allied with the Syrian government.

“Aleppo is the pivot,” said Joost Hiltermann, the Middle East and North Africa programme director for the Internatio­nal Crisis Group.

Although the government might like to reclaim all of the areas of Syria that it has lost control of, Russia and Iran, another ally, are less interested, Mr Hiltermann said.

“But, they all agree on Aleppo; it is too big to let go, and the interregnu­m in the United States is a good chance to press their advantage.”

As always in the long-running Syria conflict, the sheer numbers of dead and wounded and the scale of the misery and destructio­n fast eclipses what is imaginable, and each individual story recedes. But the snapshots from the past few days in rebel-held Aleppo have been deeply disturbing.

A video circulatin­g on social media, which was taken by Al Jazeera during the bombing at the children’s hospital, showed children being treated with oxygen masks after an alleged chlorine gas attack elsewhere in the city.

The Al Jazeera team captured footage of nurses taking premature infants, whom they could balance in one hand, out of incubators as clouds of dust from the bombing rose around them. One nurse hugged another as they held tiny infants in their arms. The babies were carried to a basement shelter and placed together under a blanket.

In one shot, a father cried out for his small son. “I’ve lost everything, oh, Ahmad,” he said. “I’ve lost everything, you are my life.”

As the latest fighting took place, Staffan

de Mistura, the UN Special Representa­tive for Syria, travelled to Syria to press his proposal for a suspension of the bombing on all sides and a humanitari­an relief effort to help civilians get medical care, food and fuel and to guarantee some sort of safe passage for the insurgents.

Five rebel groups active in and around Aleppo — including the powerful Islamist group Ahrar al-Sham and several groups that receive US support — said in a letter released late on Sunday that they support Mr de Mistura’s plan.

Wallid al-Moallem, the Syrian foreign minister who met with Mr de Mistura, claimed to want to help civilians in the rebel-held areas, whom the regime views as “hostages” of the insurgents, according to a report by the Syrian Arab News Agency, which is close to Mr Assad’s government.

However, Mr Moallem dismissed out of hand any suggestion that eastern Aleppo could be self-governing. He said that would be a “reward for the terrorists”, who he said were still shelling western Aleppo, which is government-held.

 ??  ?? People ride a horse-pulled cart near the damaged al-Hakeem Hospital, in the rebel-held besieged area of Aleppo, on Saturday.
People ride a horse-pulled cart near the damaged al-Hakeem Hospital, in the rebel-held besieged area of Aleppo, on Saturday.
 ??  ?? A girl is comforted at a hospital in government-held west Aleppo.
A girl is comforted at a hospital in government-held west Aleppo.

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