Doctors recount horror of Gaza hospital blast
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[October 18, 2023]
By Nidal al-Mughrabi
GAZA (Reuters) -The head of orthopaedic surgery at Al-Ahli al-Arabi
Hospital in Gaza, Fadel Naim, had just finished a procedure when he
heard a huge explosion and his department filled with people screaming
for help.
"People came running into the surgery department screaming help us, help
us, there are people killed and wounded inside the hospital," he said.
He found the hospital full of dismembered bodies and wounded people.
"We tried to save whoever could be saved but the number was too great
for the hospital team," he said.
Tuesday's explosion killed hundreds of Palestinians and wrecked a
diplomatic mission by U.S. President Joe Biden, who arrived in Israel on
Wednesday to calm the region but was snubbed by Arab leaders who called
off an emergency summit.
Palestinian officials blamed an Israeli air strike for the blast. Israel
said the blast was caused by a failed rocket launch by the Palestinian
Islamic Jihad militant group, which denied blame.
Doctor Ibrahim Al-Naqa was proud of the 100-year-old baptist hospital.
In a region of conflict, it welcomed all faiths and offered patients a
church and a mosque.
On Tuesday, people seeking shelter from the fiercest fighting between
the Israeli military and the Palestinian militant group Hamas in decades
walked into the hospital to their deaths.
Blood stained the walls and the ground in what was normally a peaceful
place that helped patients recover.
"This place created a safe haven for women and children, those who
escaped the Israeli bombing into this hospital, those who saw this place
as a safe haven," said Naqa.
"Without warning this hospital was targeted. We don't know what the
shell is called but we saw the results of it when it targeted children
and ripped their bodies into pieces."
REGION IN CRISIS
The death toll from the hospital explosion was by far the highest of any
single incident in Gaza during the current violence, and saw protests
erupt in the occupied West Bank and the wider region, including in
Jordan and Turkey.
British-Palestinian doctor Ghassan Abusittah said the hospital had been
shaking all day because of bombing. He said he heard the sound of a
missile just before a huge explosion and then the operating room ceiling
collapsed on top of him and other physicians. In the courtyard he could
see bodies and limbs everywhere. He treated a man whose legs were blown
off.
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An injured person is assisted at Shifa Hospital after hundreds of
Palestinians were killed in a blast at Al-Ahli hospital in Gaza that
Israeli and Palestinian officials blamed on each other in Gaza City,
Gaza Strip, October 17, 2023. REUTERS/Mohammed Al-Masri/File Photo
Abusittah said Gaza's medical system had collapsed, with doctors
scrambling for even basic resources. "We are exhausted. The number
of patients just keeps getting bigger," he said.
The blast inflamed a region in crisis after Hamas, which controls
the Gaza Strip, carried out a cross-border rampage against
communities in southern Israel on Oct. 7 in which at least 1,300
people were killed and hostages were taken.
Israel responded with the heaviest ever air strikes on the blockaded
Gaza Strip and has massed troops and tanks on its border.
Israel's military on Wednesday published what it described as
evidence that a misfired Palestinian rocket caused the hospital
explosion. Hamas said it was an Israeli air strike and an Islamic
Jihad spokesman rejected Israeli accusations as "cover to justify
carrying out its massacres against Palestinian civilians".
Before Tuesday's blast, health authorities in Gaza said at least
3,000 people had died in 11 days of Israeli bombardment.
The scenes of destruction from the hospital were horrific even by
the standards of the past 12 days, which have confronted the world
with relentless images, first of Israelis slaughtered in their homes
and then of Palestinian families buried under rubble from Israel's
retaliatory strikes.
A Gaza civil defence chief gave a death toll of 300 at the hospital,
while health ministry sources put it at 500. Bodies were still being
pulled from the rubble on Wednesday.
"The massacre carried out by the Israeli occupation at the Baptist
Hospital is the massacre of the 21st century and it is a
continuation of its crimes since the Nakba of our people in 1948,"
said Salama Marouf, head of the Hamas government media office.
"Nakba", or "catastrophe", refers to when many Palestinians fled or
were forced from their homes during the 1948 war that accompanied
Israel's creation.
(Additional reporting by Abir Al Ahmar: Writing by Michael Georgy;
Editing by Janet Lawrence)
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