In a heart-wrenching turn of events, amid the ongoing conflict in Gaza, 31 premature babies faced a dire situation at al-Shifa Hospital. Trapped without life-sustaining equipment, these vulnerable infants were evacuated by ambulance, marking a desperate effort to ensure their survival. The evacuation comes as a response to the severe shortage of fuel and medical supplies following a raid by Israeli forces, leaving the hospital in a perilous state.
Premature Infants Flee to Southern Gaza
As the dust settles from the recent Israeli forces’ raid on al-Shifa Hospital, the most fragile lives hung in the balance. Thirty-nine premature babies found themselves stranded, their incubators rendered useless due to the shortage of crucial resources. The subsequent evacuation, orchestrated with urgency, sought to transport these infants to safety.
Coordinated Rescue Mission
Cooperation between the Palestine Red Crescent Society (PRCS), the World Health Organization (WHO), and the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs became the lifeline for these tiny patients. Six PRCS ambulances, moving in tandem, undertook the perilous journey from al-Shifa Hospital to southern Gaza, where hope awaited.
Global Concerns Escalate
The dire situation at al-Shifa Hospital raised international alarm, prompting swift action from health organizations. A WHO team, witnessing the harrowing conditions on the ground, reported that hundreds of patients, including those in critical condition with severe trauma and spinal injuries, remained at the hospital. Describing al-Shifa as a “death zone,” urgent calls for evacuation echoed through the corridors of the healthcare community.
Evacuation and the Road Ahead
In the aftermath of the evacuation, the premature babies, accompanied by three doctors and two nurses, are now poised to cross borders into Egypt. The Director-General of Hospitals in Gaza, Mohammed Zaqout, confirmed the successful evacuation and detailed ongoing preparations for their entry into Egyptian hospitals. The gravity of the situation was underscored by the heartbreaking revelation that four babies lost their lives during the raid.
Ashraf al-Qidra, the spokesperson for the Health Ministry in Hamas-controlled Gaza, disclosed the babies’ relocation to Tal al-Sultan Hospital in Rafah. Their onward journey to Egyptian hospitals, alongside their families, is scheduled for tomorrow. The objective is clear: to provide these infants with the medical care and support they desperately need, far from the conflict-ridden region.
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