
Scottish nurse saw dead toddler rushed into Gaza hospital
The Glasgow Royal Infirmary intensive care unit nurse was working at a UK Government-funded emergency field hospital in Al Mawasi when the ceasefire ended.
Mel said: "I was in Gaza last year and didn't think it could possibly get any worse… but it has.
"The first night the ceasefire shattered was easily the worst thing I have ever experienced.
"Even though we knew it was coming, it was still such a shock.
'The sound of explosions and fighting were so close to the hospital, so we knew we were going to be busy.
"At maybe two or three in the morning the first casualties started coming in.
"It was a conveyor belt of carnage."
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Mel worked in a emergency field hospital (Image: Supplied) During the overwhelming night, Mel was responsible for triaging patients, one of whom was a two-year-old girl, brought in dead on arrival.
Mel said: "There wasn't a mark on her and I just remember standing there thinking how can this happen?
"She looked completely perfect and was just covered in a thick layer of dust.
"The shockwave had fatally affected her tiny wee lungs.
'The porters went to get a body bag for her, but the shortage of aid getting in meant there were only adult body bags available.
"She just disappeared into it.
'We took her to the temporary mortuary at the back of the hospital.
"We put two chairs out for the family to come in… but no-one ever came."
The image of the young girl remains vivid in Mel's memory.
She said: "The sight of that little girl will haunt me forever.
"It is the thing that I think about most.
"It's at the forefront of my brain.
"It is not natural for a child to die like that.
'I didn't want to leave her there alone, but I had to get back to help the many other casualties who had been rushed in.'
Mel was part of the team at one of the UK Government-funded field hospitals, operated by UK-Med, which has so far provided care for more than 400,000 patients during the ongoing crisis.
Read more: Gaza protest march to take place in Glasgow this weekend
Mel was part of the team at one of the UK Government-funded field hospitals, operated by UK-Med (Image: Supplied) The Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office has pledged £129 million in aid for the 2024–25 financial year to support humanitarian relief in Gaza.
Mel, who has also completed two deployments to conflict-hit Ukraine, said the situation in Gaza was far beyond anything she'd previously experienced.
She said: "Honestly, I wasn't entirely sure I was going to make it out.
"That's how scary it was.
"I'm a bit embarrassed to say that because the people in Gaza are experiencing that 24/7, 365 days a year.
"I was working with people who've been working in the aid sector for over 30 years and every one of them said Gaza is just the worst thing they've ever seen.
"It is hell on earth."
Since returning to Scotland, Mel has found solace in spending time with her family — especially her two-and-a-half-year-old nephew, Hunter.
She added: "Hunter has been getting extra tight cuddles since I returned to Scotland.
"He keeps me very busy and that's good for me because quiet moments are difficult because things I experienced in Gaza kind of flash into your brain.
"He is lucky he has his whole life ahead of him, unlike that poor little baby I saw who had been killed in Gaza."
Mel's account adds to the growing body of testimony from healthcare workers and humanitarian staff detailing the devastating human toll of the conflict, which has reportedly killed over 50,000 people and displaced more than 90 percent of Gaza's population.
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