PARIS, July 29, 2014 (WAFA) - The
international medical humanitarian organization Doctors Without
Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), in a press statement issued Tuesday,
strongly condemned the Israeli attack on Gaza City’s Al Shifa hospital on July
24th, the main referral hospital for the entire Gaza Strip, where an MSF
surgical team works.
“This latest bombing of a health
facility, where thousands of people have taken refuge since Israel launched its
Operation Protective Edge three weeks ago, demonstrates how civilians in Gaza
have nowhere safe to go, and shows the difficulties of providing emergency aid
in Gaza,” it stated.
One MSF international staff
member was in the building when the outpatient department of Al Shifa hospital
was bombed. While no one was injured in this latest attack, it is the fourth
hospital in Gaza to have been hit since 8 July, the others being the European
General hospital, Al Aqsa hospital and Beit Hanoun hospital.
MSF said that, “Targeting
hospitals and their surroundings is completely unacceptable and a serious
violation of International Humanitarian Law,” says Tommaso Fabbri, MSF’s head
of mission in the Occupied Palestinian Territories. “Whatever the
circumstances, health facilities and medical staff must be protected and
respected. But in Gaza today, hospitals are not the safe havens they should
be.”
One hour after Al Shifa hospital
was attacked, a rocket strike hit Shati refugee camp. The injured – most of
them children – were brought to Al Shifa. “Two thirds of the injuries I've seen
arriving at Al Shifa have been children,” says Michele Beck, MSF’s medical
advisor in Gaza.
In the Gaza Strip, 1.8 million
people, including more than 160,000 displaced people, live in a narrow, densely
populated strip of land. “Gazans are hemmed in by the sea and closed borders,”
says Marie-Noëlle Rodrigue, MSF’s director of operations. “When the Israeli
army orders civilians to evacuate their houses and their neighborhoods, where
is there for them to go? Gazans have no freedom of movement and cannot take
refuge outside Gaza. They are effectively trapped.”
For medical and humanitarian organizations
in Gaza, such as MSF, working and moving around is extremely difficult and
dangerous. In the past three weeks, local ambulances and Red Crescent
paramedics have been killed and wounded. On 20 July, there was an airstrike
just a few hundred meters from a clearly identified MSF car. On the same day, a
missile fell – but failed to explode – some 10 meters from an MSF tent set up
in the compound of Nasser hospital, in southern Gaza.
In the past three weeks, MSF
teams have only been able to reach Nasser hospital on two occasions. MSF has
been forced to suspend its surgical activities in the hospital, despite the
significant medical needs in this severely hit area, where most of the wounded
are women and children.
“We have a surgical team ready to
work in Nasser hospital, but without firm and credible security guarantees from
both parties to the conflict, we cannot risk sending them,” says Nicolas
Palarus, MSF’s project coordinator in Gaza.
For aid organizations, getting
staff and medical supplies into Gaza is proving extremely difficult. The Rafah
crossing, from Egypt, and the Erez and Kerem Shalom crossings, from Israel, are
partially open, but there is a risk of bombings and collateral damage. “The
population is being held hostage, with almost nothing and nobody going in or
out,” says Marie-Noëlle Rodrigue.
Because of intense shelling, the
sick and wounded are also finding it difficult to reach hospitals. Half of
Gaza’s health centers are not functioning. In Gaza City, home to some 800,000
people, just four out of 15 health centers are open.
“Beyond the emergency, basic
medical needs such as maternal healthcare and the management of chronic
diseases as well as access to drinking water and food are simply not being
provided,” says Nicolas Palarus.
In response to the current
emergency, MSF is supporting Al Shifa hospital in Gaza city with a full
surgical team and emergency medical equipment. MSF has made donations from its
emergency stocks to the central pharmacy for the north and south of the Gaza
Strip. MSF’s post-operative clinic in Gaza is running at only 10 to 30% of its
capacity due to the intensity of the bombing, which is preventing patients from
reaching the clinic.
MSF’s regular activities in
Nasser hospital, Khan Younis, have been interrupted by the conflict. MSF has
been working in Gaza for more than 10 years, providing medical, surgical and
psychological care; its teams also responded to the emergencies in 2009 and 2012.
T.R.