
"So Sad": Israelis Shocked By Iran Strike On Hospital
The damage was hard to comprehend for many at Israel's Soroka Hospital as staff took stock of the wreckage after a strike by an Iranian ballistic missile on Thursday left part of the facility in ruins.
The strike in the southern city of Beersheba caused extensive damage to the hospital's entrance hall and several departments, including the ophthalmology unit on the third floor of the surgical building.
The explosion shattered windows, hurling glass across the hospital, brought ceilings crashing down, destroyed medical equipment and left corridors in disarray.
"It's so sad, I never thought something like this could happen. Never. It's only medical professionals here, and patients... and look what happened to us," Wasim Hin, an ophthalmologist at Soroka Medical Centre, told AFP.
"Here we have new equipment, everything was destroyed."
Yael Tiv, an officer in the Home Front command, said the damage was the result of a "direct hit" by a missile.
"You can see the damage inside. Shattered windows, the ceilings that fell. It's a really awful scenario inside," she added.
The hospital's director and other workers said that lives had been saved because the structure hit in the attack had been evacuated in recent days.
- Building evacuated -
"It's a miracle. The building had just been evacuated," maintenance worker Kevin Azoulay told AFP.
Even still, 40 people sustained injuries during the attack.
"Several wards were completely demolished and there is extensive damage across the entire hospital with damage to buildings, structures, windows, ceilings across the medical centre," director Shlomi Codish told journalists.
Israel's multi-layered air defence systems have managed to intercept most of the missiles and drones targeting the country during the last week of fighting between Israel and Iran.
But some have managed to slip through, wreaking widespread damage at the point of impact.
The Soroka complex is the largest hospital in southern Israel and a primary medical centre for Bedouin communities in the Negev Desert, as well as for wounded Israeli soldiers returning from the war in Gaza.
The UN's World Health Organisation leader on Thursday denounced attacks on health facilities in the Iran-Israel war as "appalling".
At the WHO annual assembly last month, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus had also urged Israel to show "mercy" in its bombardment and siege of Gaza, saying it was "wrong to weaponise" food and medical supplies.
- 'Pay a heavy price' -
Arriving at the scene of Soroka Hospital to survey the damage Thursday, Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowed swift revenge for the attack.
"We will make the tyrants in Tehran pay a heavy price," Netanyahu said in a post on X.
Iranian authorities later said the barrage had targeted a nearby Israeli command post and intelligence base, according to a report published by the state news agency IRNA.
Iran's powerful Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps also weighed in.
"In this operation, the regime's command and intelligence centre near a hospital was targeted with highly accurate and guided missiles," the force said in a statement.
Elsewhere in Israel on Thursday, buildings were also damaged in the central towns of Ramat Gan and Holon, close to coastal hub Tel Aviv, which has been repeatedly targeted by Iranian missiles since war broke out between the countries last Friday.
"The truth is, God is with us and the government must keep doing what it's doing," said Renana, a resident of a building hit in Ramat Gan.
Back at Soroka Hospital, Boris Knaizer, who heads the ophthalmology department, was at a loss.
He said the department treated around 50,000 patients a year.
"And now, how are we going to receive them?" he asked. "We have no idea, we have no space, we have no rooms, everything has been destroyed."

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Hindustan Times
6 hours ago
- Hindustan Times
Madonna urges the pope to visit Gaza 'before it's too late'
LONDON — Madonna has urged the pope to travel to Gaza and 'bring your light to the children before it's too late.' Madonna urges the pope to visit Gaza 'before it's too late' The superstar posted her appeal to the pontiff on social media Monday, saying her son Rocco's birthday prompted her to make the post. Rocco turned 25 Monday. Addressing Pope Leo XIV, she wrote: 'Most Holy Father. Please go to Gaza and bring your light to the children before it's too late. As a mother, I cannot bear to watch their suffering. 'The children of the world belong to everyone. You are the only one of us who cannot be denied entry," she added. "We need the humanitarian gates to be fully opened to save these innocent children. There is no more time. Please say you will go. Love, Madonna.' The singer added that she wasn't taking sides in the war. 'I am not pointing fingers, placing blame or taking sides. Everyone is suffering. Including the mothers of the hostages," she wrote. "I pray that they are released as well. I am merely trying to do what I can to keep these children from dying of starvation.' The pope recently renewed his call for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza, asking the international community to respect humanitarian laws and the obligation to protect civilians. 'I once again call for an immediate end to the barbarity of this war and for a peaceful resolution to the conflict,' the pontiff said last month. Aid workers and doctors have said that after months of Israeli blockade and turmoil in the distribution of supplies, children in Gaza with no previous conditions are starting to die from malnutrition. Israel's air and ground offensive, sparked by Hamas' Oct. 7, 2023 attack into Israel, has displaced most of the some 2 million Palestinians in Gaza and pushed the territory toward famine. The United Nations said that across Gaza, more than 5,000 children were diagnosed with malnutrition in May, though that is likely an undercount. Malnutrition was virtually nonexistent before the war. Doctors struggle to treat the children because many supplies have run out, the U.N. says. Israel denies a famine is taking place or that children are starving. It says it has supplied enough food throughout the war and accuses Hamas of causing shortages by stealing aid and trying to control food distribution. This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.


Time of India
9 hours ago
- Time of India
Israeli scientists identify protein that could prevent painful food allergy disease
Tel Aviv: Israeli scientists have discovered that blocking a specific protein may stop a painful food allergy-related disease before it starts. The finding, Tel Aviv University announced on Monday, could lead to targeted treatments for Eosinophilic Esophagitis (EoE) that spare patients from severe symptoms and restrictive diets. The disease - an inflammation of the oesophagus - affects an estimated 1 in 2,500 individuals. Flare-ups are caused by an abnormal allergic reaction to certain foods or environmental triggers that lead to inflammation and tissue changes in the oesophagus. Left untreated, scarring narrows the width of the oesophagus, making it difficult and painful to swallow food. In extreme cases, the oesophagus can even tear. There is no cure, and it is managed primarily by diet and medicine. But scientists at Tel Aviv University identified a protein whose neutralisation may prevent the onset of EoE. The study, conducted at the university's Gray Faculty of Medical and Health Sciences, focused on the protein thymic stromal lymphopoietin (TSLP). Researchers found that blocking it in experimental models either prevented the disease entirely or dramatically reduced its severity. Their findings were published in Allergy, a peer-reviewed journal. "Eosinophilic Esophagitis, or EoE, is a type of food allergy . It is a chronic inflammation of the esophagus caused by an abnormal immune response to food -- mainly milk, eggs, wheat, nuts, fish, and more," said Prof. Ariel Munitz, who led the study alongside doctoral student Anish Dsilva. "The disease is characterized by an accumulation of eosinophils, a type of white blood cell that is not typically present in a healthy esophagus." Symptoms include difficulty swallowing, chest and abdominal pain, food getting stuck in the throat, and in children, growth delays. EoE is often linked to asthma and atopic dermatitis. Current treatments involve strict elimination diets or amino acid-based formulas, with limited effectiveness. "Over the past decade, there has been a concerning rise in the prevalence of EoE worldwide, including in Israel," Munitz said. "We are studying the disease in depth to understand the involvement of various immune system components in its progression. These components may serve as targets for future treatment for this disease, and for other allergic disorders as well." A previous study from Munitz's lab developed an experimental model replicating EoE symptoms in humans. Building on that work, the team focused on epithelial cells -- the protective outer layer lining the esophagus. "In allergic conditions, epithelial cells release various substances in response to encountering an allergen, and these substances trigger the chain of events that initiate the inflammatory process we experience as an allergy attack," Munitz explained. The researchers observed that epithelial cells in their EoE model secreted high levels of two proteins: IL-33 and TSLP. They also found immune cells in esophageal tissue with receptors for both proteins, suggesting that each could play a role in disease development. To pinpoint which protein was more influential, the team used genetic engineering to create models lacking one protein at a time. The results were striking: removing IL-33 had little effect, but removing TSLP led to marked improvement -- in many cases, the disease did not develop at all. Antibody treatments designed to neutralize TSLP produced similar results, with significant reductions in symptoms. Further genetic and bioinformatic analysis confirmed that TSLP acts as a "key regulator" of the disease process. "These findings suggest that TSLP is not just involved but is central to driving EoE," Munitz said. "We know that pharmaceutical companies are currently developing a variety of antibodies targeting disease-causing proteins, under the broad category of biological therapies, including antibodies against TSLP. We believe these antibodies could serve as an effective treatment for EoE." The research was carried out in collaboration with Dr. Chen Varol of Ichilov Hospital, Prof. Marc Rothenberg of Cincinnati Children's Hospital, and the AstraZeneca pharmaceutical company. If future clinical trials confirm the findings, neutralizing TSLP could offer a targeted, less burdensome treatment for patients, potentially preventing years of discomfort and dietary restrictions. "EoE causes significant suffering and is becoming increasingly prevalent worldwide," Munitz said. "Our study offers real hope for a therapy that addresses the disease at its source."


Mint
10 hours ago
- Mint
American doctor describes Gaza starvation horror: ‘Kids missing limbs don't scream in pain, they cry, ‘I am hungry'…'
As Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu denies famine in Gaza, an American doctor who volunteered there for two months, recounted harrowing scenes of starvation and suffering, saying children maimed by airstrikes no longer scream from pain but from hunger. Aqsa Durrani, who is a pediatric doctor and board member of Doctors Without Borders, also claimed that she was allowed to enter Gaza with only seven pounds (approximately 3.17 kg) of food. She spent two months in Gaza with that amount of food. Speaking with Humans of New York, Aqsa Durrani said the Israeli military had rules about how much food can be taken inside the territory. Her testimony comes as Israel continues to deny humanitarian crisis in the Palestinian territory, asserting the war is only on Hamas militants. The American doctor's testimony on Gaza starvation said otherwise. 'When I entered Gaza the Israeli military had a rule: I was only allowed to bring in seven pounds of food. As I was weighing out protein bars, trying to get under the limit, I said to my husband: 'How sinister is this?' Why would there even be a limit on food? I've worked in many places with extreme hunger, but what's so jarring in this context is how cruel it is, how deliberate." From the hospital, Aqsa Durrani described treating victims of Israeli airstrikes alongside fellow doctors who were themselves 'hungry and exhausted.' 'I was in Gaza for two months; there's no way to describe the horror of what's happening. And I say this as a pediatric ICU doctor who sees children die as part of my work. Among our own staff we have doctors and nurses who are trying to treat patients while hungry, exhausted. They're living in tents. Some of them have lost fifteen, twenty members of their families,' she said. The American doctor said children with missing limbs and third-degree burns didn't scream from pain, but from hunger, crying, 'I'm hungry!' "In the hospital there are kids maimed by airstrikes: missing arms, missing legs, third degree burns. Often there's not enough pain medication. But the children are not screaming about the pain, they're screaming: 'I'm hungry! I'm hungry!' 'I remember when our bus pulled out of the buffer zone. Out the window on one side I could see Rafah, which was nothing but rubble. On the other side was lush, green Israel.' Also Read | Gaza children face battle for survival: 10 disturbing photos of horrific hunger crisis and misery 'When we exited the gate, the first thing I saw was a group of Israeli soldiers, sitting at a table, eating lunch. I've never felt so nauseous seeing a table full of food,' Aqsa Durrani said. In a podcast, the American doctor recalled the anguish of telling crying, desperate mothers that she had no food for their starving children — even though supplies were just miles away. 'But it's not because we don't have it. It's because it's being deliberately blocked from us,' she said.