Doctors call for halt to Gaza assault
by Maria Chen
LONDON – International doctors called for an end to the violence in Gaza, saying hospitals were scenes of "nightmarish havoc" in articles published Wednesday in The Lancet medical journal. In a special report detailing the human toll of the Gaza offensive, the Lancet said Gaza City's Al Shifa hospital asked for extra refrigeration equipment before the bodies of patients with severe wounds began decomposing.
The hospital, Gaza's largest, reported its 585 beds were filled in the first week of the Israeli offensive.
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According to the Palestinian Center for Human Rights, the death toll is somewhat lower: As of Wednesday, it said, 225 children and 70 women had been killed. However, the ministry defines children as 18 and under, the Palestinian Center 17 and under.
Israeli defense officials acknowledge the military has loosened its rules of engagement during the current round of fighting to prevent the killing or capture of soldiers. But military officials note that Hamas fighters have worn civilian clothing while fighting Israeli troops, using schools, mosques and crowded residential areas for cover, making it hard to keep ordinary residents out of harm's way.
Reacting to the Lancet articles, Israeli Cabinet Minister Isaac Herzog said his country has worked hard to allow humanitarian aid into Gaza throughout the fighting, and Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesman Yigal Palmor sharply criticized one of the doctors quoted in the Lancet for "spreading vicious lies."
Paul Garwood, a Geneva-based spokesman for the World Health Organization, said the Gaza Health Ministry's figures had not been independently verified, but they seemed reasonable based on their staff's observations in Gaza. In a statement last week, WHO declared that health services in Gaza were "on the point of collapse."
UNICEF called the situation "tragic" and "unacceptable."
The International Committee of the Red Cross said the Israeli army has failed to evacuate the wounded.
"The violence launched on Gaza is taking an unjustifiable toll on civilian populations," the Lancet said in an editorial. "These actions contravene the fourth Geneva convention," it said, referring to the international agreement that civilians are to be protected in times of war.
The Lancet also published a letter signed by more than 700 medical students calling for an end to the Gaza attacks.
Norwegian doctors Mads Gilbert and Erik Fosse, who are working inside the Al Shifa hospital, described Gaza's health situation as "nightmarish havoc" in the Lancet special report.
The pair have more than two decades of experience working in Gaza and other war zones. Gilbert and Fosse wrote that since arriving in Gaza on Dec. 31, 2008, they have "witnessed the most horrific war injuries in men, women and children of all ages in numbers almost too large to comprehend."
More than 350 surgeries were performed in the first two weeks of the attacks. All of those were on patients injured in the fighting; all other surgeries have been suspended.
Each operating room is equipped with one table and several lights, though many are not working, Gilbert and Fosse said. Without adequate lighting, the staff sometimes resort to using cell phone lights, the doctors wrote.
With widespread power shortages throughout Gaza, Shifa heavily relies on generators for electricity.
Gilbert and Fosse had no statistics on the types of surgeries being performed, but had participated in many amputations, including some triple amputations. They said that the killed and injured they have seen in the hospital have overwhelmingly been civilians.
Since most health services not immediately related to the violence have been disrupted or suspended, experts are also worried about people with chronic problems like cancer or heart disease, many of whom have fled Gaza for Egypt or Israel.
Palmor questioned the accuracy of Gilbert's comments.
"Dr. Gilbert is notorious for his radical far left opinions and his systematic demonizaton of Israel. He has already accused Israel of almost every nightmarish crime in the book only to ignore the refutation of every one of his allegations," Palmor told The Associated Press.
"His stories are worthy of Dante's imagination but have been proved time and again to be far removed from reality. It is a pity that serious members of the medical profession should allow themselves to be dragged into an excessive of mad Mads."
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