Five
hundred critically ill Syrian patients, including scores of young
children, are trapped with dwindling access to medical supplies in a
besieged rebel-held district northeast of Damascus in what some
aid workers are calling a humanitarian catastrophe.
In
recent weeks, drawing relatively little international press coverage,
forces of the Syrian regime of President Bashar Assad have pounded the
area with airstrikes — including cluster bombs — as part of a ferocious
assault on eastern Ghouta, just 12 miles from the country’s capital. The
region is the larger of two Damascus suburbs still under the control of
rebels who have been fighting Assad’s regime for the past six years.
As
the government offensive escalates, hundreds of patients in the
district who suffer from malnutrition, cancer, kidney failure and other
diseases have been unable to receive treatment or evacuate, the aid
monitors say, warning that siege conditions verge on famine.
The UN declared the situation a humanitarian emergency on Thursday
after its top humanitarian advisor, Jan Egeland, called situation a “catastrophe.”“Siege
conditions in Eastern Ghouta are at their worst point since the siege
began in 2013,” said Valerie Szybala, director of the Syria Institute, a
Washington, D.C., nonprofit that is monitoring the crisis. “Since this
summer, we have seen a growing number of civilian deaths due to the
lack of access to medical care and malnutrition. With winter beginning,
the conditions will only grow worse, as people do not have electricity
or fuel to make fires.
Of
the 502 patients who are at most serious risk, 63 are children younger
than 5, Dr. Mohamed Katoub of Syrian American Medical Society (SAMS), a
nonprofit medical relief organization, told Yahoo News in an interview
from Gaziantep, Turkey. In the past, Katoub’s organization was able to
treat patients with supplies smuggled in through tunnels connecting the
area to the opposition-controlled neighborhoods of Barzeh and Qaboun.
But
the Syrian military shut the tunnels in May, and basic medical
supplies such as anesthetics and surgical gloves are quickly running out
— and the patients have nowhere else to go. “Now we don’t have access
for patients to go to Damascus. We don’t have access to medicines to
bring inside, so we started seeking evacuation,” said Katoub.ctors began requesting evacuations in July. Since then, Katoub says,
only eight patients have been evacuated and 11 have died, because
diseases that usually can be treated or managed have become fatal. Local
doctors must wait for the government to approve aid convoys and
ambulances to evacuate patients. Yet only ten aid convoys have passed
through the regime checkpoint this year, each delivering barely enough
supplies for a month, says Katoub. The regime removes surgical items
from the convoys as well, he added — even from caesarean section kits.
One
of the families Katoub is most concerned about is in Irbin and has four
boys younger than 12 who have hemophilia. Hemophilia, a congenital
failure of blood-clotting, was once frequently fatal but now be managed
with clotting factor replacement therapy.
But
in siege conditions, without treatment, “any wound might be a killer,”
said Katoub. “This disease is not killing in other places.” Any medical
procedures that can cause bleeding, such as dental work, can become
catastrophic.
For
Katoub, the frustration is compounded because adequate medical care can
be accessed just a few miles away. But evacuation does not guarantee
safety for residents from the longstanding opposition stronghold. A
5-year-old boy with a suspected case of polio was one of the few
patients moved to Damascus. Born after the siege of Ghouta began, he had
no official identification papers. After the hospital told the boy’s
father to obtain certain papers, he headed to the civil records office.
There, he was arrested.
Though
relatively unknown to foreigners before the war, eastern Ghouta has
been permanently inked on the map in blood. The agricultural periphery
of Damascus emerged as a key battleground against the regime, led by rival rebel groups
that eventually came under the control of the Saudi-backed Jaysh
al-Islam (Army of Islam). These opposition factions built and operated
the tunnels for smuggling that helped sustain the resistance to Assad in
his backyard. Rebel groups competed not only with each other, but also
with regime-backed war traders running goods and supplies through the Wafideen crossing point into eastern Ghouta.
Eastern
Ghouta has paid dearly for its resistance. Residents have endured a
grueling siege punctuated by chemical-weapon attacks that horrify the
international community but fail to spur action. The population has
declined by more than half — from 1.2 million to about 400,00. Since the
tunnels were closed, the price of goods has skyrocketed. Last Sunday,
the government imposed an exorbitant tax of 2,000 Syrian pounds (a
little less than $4) on every kilo of food coming through the regime
crossing point.
Eastern
Ghouta is one of several de-escalation zones negotiated between Russia,
Iran and Turkey in September during the Astana ceasefire talks. Under
the agreement, a cessation of hostilities would allow for unimpeded
access to humanitarian aid. Instead, the Syrian regime has launched a
final campaign to crush the remaining rebel resistance in eastern
Ghouta, recalling the brutal offensive to recapture eastern Aleppo last
year.
But
unlike the outcry that met the regime’s onslaught then, Assad’s final
play for eastern Ghouta is unfolding with impunity and in silence. The
Trump administration recently ceded to Russia political and military
authority to end the war, further closing the door to Western aid and
support. “If something is not done immediately, thousands of innocent
civilians will die,” said Szybala. “Unfortunately, based on the
lackluster response from international actors it seems quite clear that
nothing will be done.”
The pattern of political cover repeated last week: Russia proposed a ceasefire, which the Syrian government accepted. Syrian forces bombed eastern Ghouta the next day.
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