By Kathryn Maureen Ryan
Impunity Watch, Managing Editor

DAMASCUS, Syria – Attacks carried out by the Syrian Air Force against rebel-held areas east of Damascus have pushed poorly equipped hospitals and doctors beyond capacity to treated the wounded Doctors without Borders said on Wednesday. In the besieged Eastern Ghouta area, “the number of patients treated in the hospitals we support has gone beyond breaking point,” said Dr. Bart Janssens, director of operations the French charity, Medicines Sans frontiers, Doctors without Borders (MSF). “The number of requests for medical supplies has shot up,” he added. MSF reported the regime airstrikes two medical facilities on 5 February forcing both staff and patients to evacuate. “One nurse was killed on his way to work in a hospital on 8 February,” the international NGO reported, adding that hundreds of wounded people have been treated at MSF-supported medical facilities in Eastern Ghouta in recent weeks as regime airstrikes continue.

Fighters loyal to Syria’s President Bashar Al-Assad ride on military vehicles and tanks after regaining control of Deir al-Adas, a town south of Damascus February 10, 2015. (Photo courtesy of Reuters UK)

Medicines Sans Frontiers has highlighted the changes of providing medical assistance to civilians living under horrific conditions in Syria stating that it is sometimes nearly impossible to provide aid; “it is almost a mission impossible in view of the blockades and road blocks. If we are lucky we will get there, but the process will take a long time and tremendous effort. The same goes for donations. We are hardly able to receive any donations because of the siege. Some hospitals in the region have shared with us some of their limited stock, but there is not really enough to go around. We can hardly imagine how we could cope should a similar emergency occur again, the agency said.” Doctors without borders has criticized the international community’s failure to adequately respond to the critical medical situation in Syria, saying “the world has been watching for years. The medical situation, and the general living conditions, are beyond any red lines, and alarm bells have been vainly ringing for a long time.”

Khaled Khoja, leader of the Syrian National Coalition, called on world leaders to take “immediate action” to end regime attacks on civilian populations in the rebel-held suburbs of Damascus. He issued the appeal on Thursday at a press conference held from the group’s base in neighboring Turkey. Reports say that an estimated 150 people have been killed in regime airstrikes within the last 10 days. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a human rights origination based in the United Kingdom, said it has documented at least 183 people, including 29 children, who were killed in regime airstrikes in Ghouta since the beginning of the month.

“The Assad regime’s killing of children and the elderly with rockets, barrel bombs, and toxic gases is as a crime as horrible as ISIS’s slaughtering and burning of people alive,” Khoja said. Khoja argued that Assad’s “barbaric assault” on Douma constitutes a war crime and urged the United Nations to force the Syrian leader to stop indiscriminate bombardment of rebel-held territory.

For more information please see:

ABC News – Syria Rebels Call for Help against Assad As Death Toll Rises – 12 February 2015

Al Arabiya – Syria Bombings Push Hospitals ‘Beyond Breaking Point’: MSF – 11 February 2015

Reuters UK – Syrian Air Attacks Kill Nearly 200 in Damascus Suburbs – Monitor – 11 February 2015

Medicines Sans Frontiers – Syria: Hospitals Struggle to Cope with Shelling In Besieged Areas – 10 February 2015

Author: Impunity Watch Archive