Lebanese doctor races to save the eyes of those hurt by exploding tech
devices
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[September 23, 2024]
By BASSEM MROUE
BEIRUT (AP) — For almost a week, ophthalmologist Elias Jaradeh has
worked around the clock, trying to keep up with the flood of patients
whose eyes were injured when pagers and walkie-talkies exploded en masse
across Lebanon.
He has lost track of how many eye operations he has performed in
multiple hospitals, surviving on two hours of sleep before starting on
the next operation. He has managed to save some patients’ sight, but
many will never see again.
“There is no doubt that what happened was extremely tragic, when you see
this overwhelming number of people with eye injures arriving at the same
time to the hospital, most of them young men, but also children and
young women,” he told The Associated Press at a Beirut hospital this
past week, struggling to hold back tears.
Lebanese hospitals and medics were inundated after thousands of
hand-held devices belonging to the Hezbollah militant group detonated
simultaneously on Tuesday and Wednesday last week, killing at least 39
people. Around 3,000 more were wounded, some with life-altering
disabilities. Israel is widely believed to have been behind the attack,
although it has neither confirmed nor denied its involvement.
Although the explosions appear to have targeted Hezbollah fighters, many
of the victims were civilians. And many of those hurt in the attack
suffered injuries to their hands, face and eyes because the devices
received messages just before they detonated, so they were looking at
the devices as they exploded.
Authorities have not said how many people lost their eyes.
Veteran and hardened Lebanese eye doctors who have dealt with the
aftermath of multiple wars, civil unrest and explosions, said they have
never seen anything like it.
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Doctors make an eye surgery operation on a man who was injured in
the explosion of one of the handheld devices, at the Eye Specialist
hospital, in Beirut, Lebanon, Friday, Sept. 20, 2024. (AP
Photo/Hussein Malla)
Jaradeh, who is also a lawmaker
representing south Lebanon as a reformist, said most of the patients
sent to his hospital, which specializes in ophthalmology, were young
people who had significant damage to one or both eyes. He said he
found plastic and metal shrapnel inside some of their eyes.
Four years ago, a powerful blast tore through Beirut’s port, killing
more than 200 people and wounding more than 6,000. That explosion,
caused by the detonation of hundreds of tons of ammonium nitrates
that had been stored unsafely at a port warehouse, blew out windows
and doors for miles around and sent cascades of glass shards pouring
onto the streets, leading to horrific injuries.
Jaradeh also treated people hurt in the port explosion, but his
experience with those wounded by the exploding pagers and
walkie-talkies has been so much more intense because of the sheer
volume of people with eye injuries.
“Containing the shock after the Beirut port blast was, I believe, 48
hours while we haven’t reached the period of containing the shock
now,” Jaradeh said.
Jaradeh said he found it hard to dissociate his job as a doctor from
his emotions in the operating theater.
“No matter what they taught you (in medical school) about distancing
yourself, I think in a situation like this, it is very hard when you
see the sheer numbers of wounded. This is linked to a war on Lebanon
and war on humanity,” Jaradeh said.
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