Aleppo: Rescue efforts can do nothing compared to victims numbers

Aleppo: Rescue efforts can do nothing compared to victims numbers
Injured civilians receive medical treatment at a field hospital after War crafts belonging to the Syrian and Russian army carried out an airstrike at Saladin town of Aleppo, Syria on September 25, 2016

Dozens of Assad-Russian airstrikes hit rebel-held areas of the northern Syrian city of Aleppo day and night adding more victims to the tragic death toll, while the paramedics and medical teams can’t coup with the overwhelming  tragedy.

Assad regime said on Thursday it was starting a new wide offensive to recapture the rebel-held parts of Aleppo after a week-long ceasefire was declared officially over on Monday. the offensive includes a ground assault, artillery bombardment, and intensive airstrikes.

Since last Monday, more than 400 civilians have been killed in rebel-held areas of Aleppo province, including the besieged eastern part of the city, Civil defense workers said on Monday.

Rescue efforts have been severely hampered because bomb damage has made roads impassable and because civil defense centers and rescue equipment have been destroyed in raids.

Civil defense worker Ammar al Selmo said rescuers have only two fire trucks and three ambulances left in Aleppo and that three fire trucks, two ambulances and three vans had been hit in the past week.

“We are trying to respond … but we don’t know what tomorrow will bring,” Selmo said, speaking from Gaziantep, Turkey after recently leaving east Aleppo.

The massive five-day assault has overwhelmed the already-depleted medical and rescue infrastructure.

Only 30 remaining doctors are currently serving 250,000 people in east Aleppo, the Syrian American Medical Society reported on Friday.

“There are 30 doctors who are still inside the eastern Aleppo city,” Abd Arrahman Alomar, a pediatrician who works for the Syrian American Medical Society (SAMS) in opposition-controlled areas, told a news briefing in Geneva.

“There are hundreds of injured people in the streets, in dangerous condition, some of them are being treated there,” Alaa al-Halabi, a citizen journalist in east Aleppo told Syria Direct on Sunday. “Others are moved to small houses serving as field hospitals. Those are overflowing too, with the dead and injured.”

“We go into mountains, we work underground, and even our facilities underground and into the mountains were targeted many times, many times,” Alomar said. “If this continues, we are going to the point of zero where there are no facilities to be protected, where there is no health staff to be protected.”

Mazen Kewara, Turkey country director for SAMS, said: “We have a huge need for fluids inside Aleppo. Still there is no IV (intravenous) fluids.”

Attacks on medical facilities and personnel have devastated the health care system, U.N. agencies and health experts say.

“The systematic and widespread assault on hospitals and doctors which is orchestrated mainly by Syrian government forces has cut off access to health care for hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of Syrians,” said Elise Baker of Physicians for Human Rights.

“We do not have enough doctors to cope with such a high number of casualties,” said Ibrahim al-Hajj, a volunteer with the White Helmets, a rescue group that operates in rebel-held districts. He said more than 200 injured people are in makeshift hospitals.

They lack equipment and emergency medicine to treat the many trauma cases, and there is only enough fuel to run hospital generators for 20 days. One obstetrician and two paediatricians remain to care for pregnant women and 85,000 children, he said.

The Assad regime forces has been tightening its grip on rebel-held districts of Aleppo this year, and this summer achieved a long-held goal of fully encircling the area.

Recovering full control of the rebels’ last significant urban area would be the most important victory of the war so far for Assad, strengthening his control over Syria’s most populous and strategically important regions.

The Syrian crisis began as a peaceful demonstration against the injustice in Syria. Assad regime used to fire power and violence against the civilians and led to armed resistance. 450.000 Syrians lost their lives in the past five years according to UN estimates, and more than 12 million have lost their homes.

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Injured civilians receive medical treatment at a field hospital after War crafts belonging to the Syrian and Russian army carried out an airstrike at Saladin town of Aleppo, Syria on September 25, 2016
Aleppo: Rescue efforts can do nothing compared to victims numbers
A man carries a child who was killed by Assad-Russian airstrikes on Aleppo
Aleppo: Rescue efforts can do nothing compared to victims numbers
Rescue workers trying to pull children from the rubble after Assad-Russian airstrikes on Aleppo
Aleppo: Rescue efforts can do nothing compared to victims numbers
Injured civilians receive medical treatment at a field hospital after War crafts belonging to the Syrian and Russian army carried out an airstrike at Saladin town of Aleppo, Syria on September 25, 2016