Eastern Ghouta’s medical system ‘is close to collapse’

Death toll in the besieged area climbs amid claims Syrian forces are targeting hospitals

An injured child receives medical attention inside a hospital in Douma, Ghouta, Syria. Photograph: Mohammed Badra/EPA
An injured child receives medical attention inside a hospital in Douma, Ghouta, Syria. Photograph: Mohammed Badra/EPA

The medical system in eastern Ghouta is near collapse, medics and doctors say, after nearly a week of air strikes that have hit 22 hospitals and clinics and led to widespread claims that civilian healthcare in the besieged Syrian area is being systematically annihilated.

Medics inside Ghouta claimed only three medical facilities remained fully operational and all of them were overwhelmed with mass casualties. Médecins Sans Frontières said 13 hospitals it supported had been destroyed or damaged in the three days up to Thursday alone.

As the damage and death toll from the strikes continued to mount, international organisations that monitor the Syria crisis alleged there was clear evidence that hospitals in the rebel enclave were deliberately targeted by Syrian bombers.

“The unspeakable suffering we are witnessing was deliberately planned and meticulously implemented over time,” said Susannah Sirkin, the director of international policy at Physicians for Human Rights, an NGO.

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"The current situation is the lethal result of a conscious strategy of besiegement, blocking of aid and, ultimately, the illegal destruction of civilian targets with bombs – a tactic the Syrian government and its allies initiated in Aleppo and are now repeating with brutality in eastern Ghouta."

Advocacy group the Violations Documentation Centre in Syria, which has compiled data on attacks in the conflict, said hospitals were being targeted with different munitions to those used elsewhere in Ghouta. “We have observed and documented that the Syrian government targeted the medical points with directed rockets,” said Mona Zeineddine, the group’s director of communications.

“This is important to note because the Syrian regime is largely using unguided and improvised bombs, but when it comes to hospitals and medical points, guided and directed rockets are used. Also when a particular medical site is hit once, it is then hit again when first-responders arrive.”

Directly targeted

Authorities in Ghouta have also detailed attacks on up to six civil defence centres, which have been used to co-ordinate rescue attempts.

“We are being directly targeted by aeroplane strikes,” said Abu Saleh al-Ghoutani, an ambulance driver. “Even as we’re rescuing people from under the rubble or driving them to the hospitals we are mercilessly and directly targeted. They wait and see where we’re driving and they bomb us.

“We have 250 documented deaths, and 1,700 injured until Wednesday. The death toll will rise because some are gravely injured.”

Injured children receive medical attention inside a hospital in  Douma, Ghouta, Syria. Photograph: Mohammed Badra/EPA
Injured children receive medical attention inside a hospital in Douma, Ghouta, Syria. Photograph: Mohammed Badra/EPA

According to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a UK-based war monitor, at least 462 people have been killed and many hundreds injured in eastern Ghouta since last Sunday night. The dead include at least 99 children.

One Ghouta doctor, who uses the pseudonym Abu Bakr, said: “We’ve been targeted directly. It’s an ungodly situation; we weren’t prepared for this brutality. Civilians did not expect such cruelty. Those who aren’t able to reach shelters are exposed to their deaths. We’re targeted by barrel bombs and all types of rockets. There is scarcity of food and water. We cannot do our jobs properly as well, it’s impossible. Our hands are tied. There is no electricity. We do not know what’s coming in the next few days.”

The sustained air campaign has led to strident criticism from aid agencies but has generated little diplomatic momentum, despite repeated claims that the attacks have constituted war crimes.

Dr Ghanem Tayara, the chairman of the Union of Medical Care and Relief Organisations, said: “Even war has rules and their actions violate countless UN resolutions. In military battles, even the dead and wounded are allowed to be cleared. The civilians of Ghouta are afforded no such dignity. Their hospitals, schools, food warehouses are destroyed and they are condemned to a slow and painful death.”

"Shouldn't there be an emergency Security Council meeting to resolve this?" said Ghoutani. "We've had no electricity for four years; children are dying, no milk, no food and no water. The shelters that the families and women and children are hiding in are in terrible conditions: they have no floors, or windows.

“We had one ‘sugar dealer’ who was a pro-regime man, and a kilogramme of sugar cost us 17,000 Syrian pounds [€64]. We are now resorting to giving our kids sugary [fluids] as food.” – Guardian