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Gaza surgeons operate in corridors as Israeli bombs fill hospitals

October 31, 2023 at 1:51 pm

Injured people including children are taken to Hospital as Israeli attacks, Gaza on October 29, 2023 [Ashraf Amra/Anadolu Agency]

When Gaza’s Indonesian Hospital received a sudden influx of patients badly injured by Israeli bombing today, medics set up an operating room in a corridor because the main surgical theatres were full, they said.

Juggling dwindling supplies of medicines, power cuts and air or artillery strikes that shake hospital buildings, surgeons in Gaza work through the night trying to save a constant stream of patients, Reuters reports.

“We take it an hour at a time because we don’t know when we will be receiving patients. Several times we’ve had to set up surgical spaces in the corridors and even sometimes in the hospital waiting areas,” said Doctor Mohammed Al-Run.

He was speaking soon after bombardment damaged the Indonesian Hospital near the frontlines where Israel’s military is pushing into the tiny, crowded Palestinian enclave, and with fuel supply for its generators about to run out, according to doctors.

Israeli tanks have entered Gaza, home to 2.3 million people, after three weeks of intense bombing that has smashed entire districts in response since 7 October.

Health authorities in the enclave say more than 8,500 people have been killed in Israel’s assault, including 3,500 children.

In northern Gaza, where Israel has ordered a million people to leave their homes and head for the southern half of the enclave, hospital conditions have been particularly tough.

Officials at the Turkish Friendship Hospital said bombing had damaged a ward treating cancer patients.

“The bombardment caused great damage and put some electro-mechanical systems out of work. It also endangered the lives of patients and medical teams,” said Doctor Sobi Skaik, director of the hospital, the area’s only cancer treatment facility.

Although a near-total communications blackout over the weekend has eased since yesterday, many Gaza residents fear losing touch with friends and relatives again under the bombardment.

For emergency and medical services, the loss of phone and internet caused significant operational problems.

“We are in the 21st century and all institutions depend on the internet and communications and electricity. Should these things get cut off, the Gaza Strip would be isolated from the rest of the world,” said Sobhi Abu Zaid, a displaced man sheltering at Nasser Hospital in Khan Yunis, in the south.

Power cuts

Israel has blockaded Gaza, cutting off electricity, and refuses to allow in fuel. Hospitals have warned they may soon be unable to operate generators needed to maintain life-saving functions.

“In a few hours from now the power will cut due to the limited fuel available,” said surgeon Moaeen Al-Masri, adding this would lead to the deaths of patients in intensive care and surgical wards.

Gaza’s Health Ministry spokesperson Ashraf Al-Qudra said the main generators for both the Indonesian Hospital and for Al-Shifa Hospital, in Gaza City, could be switched off late on tomorrow.

Last week, the Indonesian Hospital nearly ran out of fuel and had to cut electricity in much of the facility. After receiving some of Gaza’s increasingly limited supplies it is operating again, but remains close to a total blackout, Al-Masri said.

The Indonesian Hospital has about 250 patients at present, AL-Masri said. Because it is close to frontlines in northern Gaza, the hospital has received many of those caught in Israel’s bombardment and advance, he said.

Since Israel expanded its ground operations in Gaza on Friday, the northern districts of Beit Lahiya and Beit Hanoun have been under particularly heavy fire. Palestinians have been forced to carry bodies to the hospital on a donkey carts.

READ: Israel bombs vicinity of cancer hospital in Gaza