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Scarred by war, failed by blockade
Scarred by war, failed by blockade

The Star

time16 hours ago

  • Health
  • The Star

Scarred by war, failed by blockade

HAMZA Abu Shabab cringed in pain as his mother pulled off his shirt and eased his bandaged head back onto his pillow so she could apply ointment to his small, burned body. The seven-year-old suffered third degree burns across his head, neck and shoulders when, frightened by an Israeli airstrike, he spilled a hot plate of rice and lentils onto himself in his family's tent in southern Gaza. His recovery has been slowed by Israel's blockade that bars all medicine, food, fuel and other goods from entering Gaza. His burns have become infected – the boy's immune system is weakened by poor nutrition and supplies of antibiotics are limited, said his mother, Iman Abu Shabab. 'Had there not been a siege or it was a different country, he would have been treated and cured of his wounds,' she said at her son's bedside in Nasser Hospital in Khan Yunis. Israel's blockade has forced hospitals and clinics across Gaza to stretch limited stocks of medicines even as needs increase. For burn patients, the lack of supplies is particularly excruciating. Burns are painful and susceptible to infection, but hospitals are short on painkillers, anaesthetics, dressings and hygiene materials, said Julie Faucon, the medical coordinator for Gaza and the occupied West Bank with Doctors Without Borders. Layan sitting despondently among her dolls at Nasser hospital with second-degree burns on her face, foot and stomach, caused a week earlier during an Israeli army strike on her home in Khan Yunis, Gaza. — AP Since Israel resumed bombardment across Gaza in mid-March, the number of patients with strike-related burns coming into Nasser Hospital has increased five-fold, from five a day to 20, according to Doctors Without Borders, which supports the facility. The burns are also bigger, covering up to 40% of people's bodies, Faucon said. Some patients have died because burns impacted their airways and breathing or because they developed severe infections, she said. While strikes are a main cause of burns, people also seek treatment for accidents, such as spilling hot liquids. That is in part due to the squalid living conditions, with hundreds of thousands of displaced Palestinians squeezed into tents and crowded shelters, often cooking over woodfires. Hamza was one of more than 70 patients in Nasser Hospital's burns and orthopaedic ward – as many as it could hold – with more streaming in for daily care. His mother said Hamza has undergone nine surgeries, including four on his face. The hospital ran out of the liquid painkillers used for children, and he struggles to swallow the larger pills, she said. In another room, four-year-old Layan Ibrahim Sahloul sits despondently among her dolls, with second-degree burns across her face, foot and stomach. A strike on her house in Khan Yunis killed her pregnant mother and two siblings, burying her under the rubble. Layan has difficulty moving and has become withdrawn and in a constant state of fear, said her aunt, Raga Sahloul. She also suffers from malnutrition, she said. 'I am scared it will take her months instead of weeks to heal,' said her aunt. Iman standing near Hamza, who lies in bed with third-degree burns caused when he was frightened by an Israeli airstrike, at Nasser hospital in Khan Yunis, Gaza. — AP The number of malnourished children has swelled under Israel's blockade, with aid groups warning that people are starving. Without proper nutrition, patients' recovery is slowed and their bodies can't fight infection, say health professionals. At the meeting of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's security Cabinet recently, which decided to expand operations in Gaza, ministers were told that 'at this point, there is enough food in Gaza', without elaborating. according to two Israeli officials, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss the meeting. Israel claims its blockade and renewed military campaign aim to pressure Palestinian resistance group Hamas to release the remaining hostages it holds and to accede to Israel's demands that it disarm. Rights groups have said the blockade is a 'starvation policy' and a potential war crime. The United Nations has warned that Gaza's healthcare system is on the brink of collapse, overwhelmed by casualties with essential medicines running out. Doctors say they're also worried about prospects for long-term care for burn patients. Many need reconstructive surgery, but few plastic surgeons remain in Gaza. Israel has increasingly rejected entry for international medical staff, aid workers say, though some continue to have access. At the end of April, 10-year-old Mira al-Khazandar was severely burned on her arms and chest when a strike hit near her tent. Worried that she will have permanent scars, her mother combs pharmacies looking for ointments for her. Mira has been able to return to the family's tent to recover, but she suffers from the sand and mosquitoes there, said her mother Haneen al-Khazandar. She has to go regularly to the hospital, which risks infecting her burns and causes her pain, standing under the sun waiting for transport. 'She is recovering slowly because there is no treatment, no medicines and no food,' she said. 'She is tired, she can't sleep all night because of the pain... Even after I give her medicine, it doesn't help.' — AP

Medical charity MSF accuses Ethiopian soldiers of ‘targeted killing' of 3 staffers in Tigray in 2021
Medical charity MSF accuses Ethiopian soldiers of ‘targeted killing' of 3 staffers in Tigray in 2021

The Hill

timea day ago

  • The Hill

Medical charity MSF accuses Ethiopian soldiers of ‘targeted killing' of 3 staffers in Tigray in 2021

ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia (AP) — International aid organization Doctors Without Borders on Tuesday released a report describing the gunning-down of three staffers in Ethiopia's Tigray region four years ago as an 'intentional and targeted killing' by members of Ethiopia's military. Ethiopia's government hasn't commented on the new report and didn't immediately reply to questions from The Associated Press. María Hernández Matas, a 35-year-old Spanish coordinator, local colleague Yohannes Haleform Reda and driver Tedros Gebremariam were shot dead in June 2021, forcing the medical charity, also known by its French acronym, MSF, to stop its services in Tigray despite conflict there. The two years of fighting that ended in late 2022 between Tigrayans and the federal government and its allies left an estimated hundreds of thousands of people dead and an unknown number of others wounded. The new MSF report accuses the Ethiopian federal government of not following through on its promise to investigate and release its findings, despite pressure from the families of the deceased and the humanitarian organization. 'And we know that our colleagues were not killed by mistake, or in a crossfire situation. There was no active fighting at that time. They were fully identifiable as humanitarian workers and were shot several times at close range while facing their attackers,' Paula Gil Leyva, president of MSF Spain, told the AP. The report says Ethiopian troops were on the road where the MSF staffers were killed, and some civilian witnesses overheard a radio exchange between a commander and his troops as he gave an order to shoot. 'Our teams had been suffering hostility and aggressions by the (Ethiopian National Defense Force) ground troops, the (Eritrean Defense Force) troops and their allied militia for weeks before the killings,' Leyva said. ___

Three Aid Workers Were ‘Intentionally Killed' in Ethiopia, M.S.F. Says
Three Aid Workers Were ‘Intentionally Killed' in Ethiopia, M.S.F. Says

New York Times

timea day ago

  • Politics
  • New York Times

Three Aid Workers Were ‘Intentionally Killed' in Ethiopia, M.S.F. Says

Doctors Without Borders has accused Ethiopia's government of failing to properly investigate the slayings of three of the group's aid workers, releasing a new report on Tuesday that implicates Ethiopian soldiers and demands that the country's government bring the perpetrators to justice. The report was the latest turn in a four-year effort to seek accountability for a notorious episode of violence against international humanitarian workers. The aid workers' bullet-riddled bodies were found on a remote roadside in the northern Tigray region of Ethiopia in June 2021, at the height of a brutal civil war. 'Our team was executed,' Raquel Ayora, a senior official with Doctors Without Borders, told reporters in Nairobi on Tuesday. 'There is no way the perpetrators could not know that they were killing civilians.' Although the report by Doctors Without Borders stopped short of explicitly naming perpetrators, it appeared to suggest that Ethiopian soldiers were responsible. That finding was broadly similar to a 2022 investigation by The New York Times that identified an Ethiopian military officer who gave orders to 'finish off' the aid workers shortly before they were killed. Doctors Without Borders, which is widely known by its French name, Médecins Sans Frontières, noted that the Ethiopian government and its forces had shown increased hostility toward international aid groups in the weeks leading up to the shootings. It also said that retreating Ethiopian troops were present on the road where the team was killed. But the group said that despite repeated assurances from the Ethiopian government that an investigation was underway, the victims' families still have not received 'credible answers' about what happened. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

MSF accuses Ethiopian soldiers of ‘targeted killing' of 3 staffers in Tigray in 2021
MSF accuses Ethiopian soldiers of ‘targeted killing' of 3 staffers in Tigray in 2021

Winnipeg Free Press

timea day ago

  • Health
  • Winnipeg Free Press

MSF accuses Ethiopian soldiers of ‘targeted killing' of 3 staffers in Tigray in 2021

ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia (AP) — International aid organization Doctors Without Borders on Tuesday released a report describing the gunning-down of three staffers in Ethiopia's Tigray region four years ago as an 'intentional and targeted killing' by members of Ethiopia's military. María Hernández Matas, a 35-year-old Spanish doctor, local colleague Yohannes Haleform Reda and driver Tedros Gebremariam were shot dead in June 2021, forcing the medical charity also known by its French acronym, MSF, to stop its services in Tigray despite conflict there. The two years of fighting that ended in late 2022 between Tigrayans and the federal government and its allies left an estimated hundreds of thousands of people dead and an unknown number of others wounded. The new MSF report accuses the Ethiopian federal government of not following through on its promise to investigate and release its findings despite pressure from the families of the deceased and the humanitarian organization. 'And we know that our colleagues were not killed by mistake, or in a crossfire situation. There was no active fighting at that time. They were fully identifiable as humanitarian workers and were shot several times at close range while facing their attackers,' Paula Gil Leyva, president of MSF Spain, told The Associated Press. The report says Ethiopian troops were on the road where the MSF staffers were killed, and some civilian witnesses overheard a radio exchange between a commander and his troops as he gave an order to shoot. 'Our teams had been suffering hostility and aggressions by the (Ethiopian National Defense Force) ground troops, the (Eritrean Defense Force) troops and their allied militia for weeks before the killings,' Leyva said. Ethiopia's government has not commented on the new report and did not immediately reply to questions from the AP.

MSF accuses Ethiopian soldiers of ‘targeted killing' of 3 staffers in Tigray in 2021
MSF accuses Ethiopian soldiers of ‘targeted killing' of 3 staffers in Tigray in 2021

Toronto Star

timea day ago

  • Health
  • Toronto Star

MSF accuses Ethiopian soldiers of ‘targeted killing' of 3 staffers in Tigray in 2021

ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia (AP) — International aid organization Doctors Without Borders on Tuesday released a report describing the gunning-down of three staffers in Ethiopia's Tigray region four years ago as an 'intentional and targeted killing' by members of Ethiopia's military. María Hernández Matas, a 35-year-old Spanish doctor, local colleague Yohannes Haleform Reda and driver Tedros Gebremariam were shot dead in June 2021, forcing the medical charity also known by its French acronym, MSF, to stop its services in Tigray despite conflict there.

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