Tuesday, May 28, 2024

Gaza hospitals operating in 'medieval' conditions: UK doctor

AFP/BRUSSELSPUBLISHED ON MAY 27, 2024 | 


People transport casualties of Israeli bombardment on Nuseirat city and east of Deir al-Balah, at the Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital in the central Gaza Strip on Monday. AFP

A pick-up driver transports bodies of casualties of Israeli bombardment on Nuseirat city and east of Deir al-Balah, at the Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital in the central Gaza Strip on Monday. AFP

Dr Khaled Dawas

A Palestinian child, wounded in an Israeli strike on an area designated for displaced people, is assisted at a hospital in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip, on Sunday. REUTERS

A Palestinian child, wounded in an Israeli strike on an area designated for displaced people, sits at a hospital, in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip, on Sunday. REUTERS

The mother (C) of Palestinian boy Khaled Abu Samaha reacts after her son was rushed to the Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital in the central Gaza Strip following his injury in Israeli bombardment on a house in Nuseirat city on Monday. AFP

Gaza hospitals are reduced to practising "medieval medicine", a British surgeon recently returned from the bombarded Palestinian territory said on Monday.

"It's absolutely true to describe it as medieval medicine. It is what you would hear about or read about what would be happening in Europe maybe 300, 400 years ago," Dr Khaled Dawas, head of gastrointestinal surgery at University College London Hospitals, told AFP in an interview.

Dawas described dire conditions in Gaza, with medical staff operating virtually without supplies, power supplies intermittent and patients lying on the floor.

He returned at the end of April from his two-week stint to help overstretched Palestinian hospital surgeons -- his second wartime stay there, following one in January.

"By April they were seeing this constant, constant volume of dying and dead bodies coming into the hospitals and any human wouldn't be able to tolerate it," he said.
"They carry on working, but you can see the effect of that. They're all extremely burdened by what they're doing."

The 54-year-old surgeon, an Arabic-speaker who has Palestinian parents, said many people in Gaza wounded or needing other medical attention tried to avoid going to the hospitals because it "means pretty much a death sentence".

That was "because of the wound infections, because of the conditions".

While the doctor said he felt "guilt" about leaving Gaza to return to his regular British medical work, from which he had taken leave, he said he would be back.

"I do hope that when I go back next time, that it'll be when the ceasefire is in place. Because watching it unfold when you're there is unbearable," he said.

"It becomes more unbearable when you leave, actually, when you think back on what you've seen and what you've heard. And you wonder how people, any human being, can survive this for so long."

Dawas was in Brussels to describe his experience to European Union officials.



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