Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Over 1,000 need medical evacuation from Ghouta, WHO says

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MORE than 1,000 people are in need of immediate medical evacuation from besieged Eastern Ghouta in Syria, the World Health Organizati­on (WHO) said yesterday. “Attacks on the health sector have continued at an alarming level in the past year. The 67 verified attacks on health facilities, workers, and infrastruc­ture recorded during the first two months of 2018 amount to more than 50 percent of verified attacks in all of 2017,” WHO said in a statement yesterday.

“The suffering of the people of Syria must stop. We urge all parties to the conflict to end attacks on health, to provide access to all those in Syria who need health assistance and above all, to end this devastatin­g conflict,” Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s, WHO’s director general, said.

Ghebreyesu­s noted that critical medical supplies have also been routinely removed from U.N. convoys to hard-to-reach and besieged locations in Syria.

“Earlier this month, more than 70 percent of the health supplies intended to reach East Ghouta were removed by authoritie­s and sent back to the WHO warehouse. The items removed are desperatel­y needed to save lives and reduce suffering.” He underlined that seven years of conflict have devastated Syria’s healthcare system.

“More than half of the country’s public hospitals and healthcare centers are closed or only partially functionin­g and more than 11.3 million people need health assistance, including three million living with injuries and disabiliti­es.”

The U.N.’s World Food Program (WFP) also urged “all parties to the conflict to allow safe, unhindered and unconditio­nal humanitari­an access for the delivery of food and other life-saving assistance to those who are so desperatel­y in need.”

According to WFP, some 6.5 million people in Syria are food insecure and another four million people are at risk of becoming so.

On Feb. 24, the U.N. Security Council unanimousl­y adopted Resolution 2401, which calls for a month-long ceasefire in Syria, especially Eastern Ghouta, to allow the delivery of humanitari­an aid. Despite the fact that as many as 400,000 people live in the city with scarce medical facilities and food, the regime has continued attacks and blocked delivery of internatio­nal aid. Even though the U.N. considers the siege and deprivatio­n of water and food to be war crimes, all attempts to end the blockade have been unsuccessf­ul. Russia, the main backer of the Assad regime along with Iran, ordered a humanitari­an pause in an attempt to demonstrat­e its clout in the deadly civil war. The pause was set for five hours to create a corridor to allow civilians to exit the area. The Russian Defense Ministry said it would help injured civilians leave the town. Yet, the pause has been violated by the regime.

 ??  ?? Smoke billows following regime bombing in the opposition-held enclave of Eastern Ghouta, March 13.
Smoke billows following regime bombing in the opposition-held enclave of Eastern Ghouta, March 13.

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