Gaza Plastic Surgeons Overwhelmed by War Injuries

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Lying on his bed in a Gaza hospital, three-year-old Yamin now sees the world from behind burns which have disfigured him for life.

The tiny boy is just one of hundreds of burn victims and those wounded by Israeli shell fire overwhelming Gaza's sole working operating theater for plastic surgeons.

He also has burns on his back and multiple fractures suffered when an Israeli strike decimated his family and destroyed their home in Al-Buraj, central Gaza, last week.

It was the evening. The start of Eid al-Fitr, the festival marking the end of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.

In a single strike, the house was turned to rubble and  19 people lay dead. Yamin, miraculously, was the sole survivor but he was left an orphan and badly burnt.

He was taken to a clinic then rapidly transferred to the burns department at the Shifa hospital in Gaza, where he cries, lying naked, and where a handful of surgeons are now confronted with the endless horrors of the war.

Every day ambulances rush in with shattered lives: charred or bloodied humans who will die a few hours later on their stretchers.

The survivors transfer to an operating table, sometimes the modest one in the burns unit, the only one in the whole of Gaza that plastic surgeons can use.

Local medics say 1,829 Palestinians, mostly civilians according to the U.N., have died since the latest confrontation between Israel and Hamas began on July 8.

At least another 9,000 have been hurt, many seriously. 

"There are very few lightly wounded," says Ghassan Abu Sitta, a plastic surgeon from the American University of Beirut, sent a week ago by the Medical Aid for Palestinians (MAP) organisation to help out in Gaza.

"My feeling is that around 70 percent of the wounded will remain disabled... their lives will never be the same."

"I had the case of an eight-year old child who had lost all his family and half his face, including an eye. And the other eye was pierced when a shell burst.

"I had to reconstruct his face to cover the wounds. He has no future and he keeps asking why the light has gone out.

"The scale and size of the carnage far exceeds the capacity of the health system," says Abu Sitta, who was also in Gaza during Israel's 'Cast Lead' operation in Gaza at the end of 2008 and start of 2009.

This time the fighting has caused more deaths and more wounded. And worse injuries.

"It is impossible to treat everyone," the surgeon says, before performing a skin graft on a young man with a pierced foot and 10 centimeter (four inch) crater on his calf, through which his tibia is visible.

 

- Hospitals struck -

 

For the past month, every day brings deliveries of bodies, wounded people and trauma to Gaza's hospitals.

"We are now looking at a health and humanitarian disaster," James Rawley, U.N. humanitarian co-ordinator for the Palestinian territories, said at the weekend.

A third of hospitals have been hit during the fighting and the violence has prevented nearly half of medical staff from reaching the clinics and health centers that are still standing.

"The current state of the health system is disastrous because the people are exhausted, many hospitals have been affected by the bombardments, and people are afraid to go to hospital," as sometimes shooting is taking place along their route, says Nicolas Palarus, head of operations in Gaza for Doctors Without Borders. 

Palestinian medical staff, the backbone of the local health system, face "stress from the fighting, being far from the family, separated, widespread fatigue, lack of some medicines," he says.

"From primary healthcare to the big hospitals, the whole chain is disrupted. The system is in a catastrophic state," Palarus says.

On this day in the burns unit, medical workers paint an antibacterial ointment onto little Yamin, naked, frail and frightened. It will help his skin scar over.

But his cousin and her husband, now his guardians, interrupt. Maybe the best thing for the tiny tot, they say, would be to evacuate him from Gaza. To get him far away from the horrors of the war.

 

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