Lives of 36 babies at Gaza hospital hang in the balance despite Israeli incubator offer

Lives of 36 babies at Gaza hospital hang in the balance despite Israeli incubator offer
This photo released by Dr. Marawan Abu Saada shows prematurely born Palestinian babies in Shifa Hospital in Gaza City on Nov. 12, 2023. (AP)
Short Url
Updated 14 November 2023
Follow

Lives of 36 babies at Gaza hospital hang in the balance despite Israeli incubator offer

Lives of 36 babies at Gaza hospital hang in the balance despite Israeli incubator offer
  • Al Shifa Hospital medical staff say no clear mechanism to move babies despite Israeli offer to supply incubators for evacuation
  • Three of the original 39 premature babies have already died since Gaza’s biggest hospital ran out of fuel at the weekend

GAZA/JERUSALEM: The lives of 36 babies at Gaza’s Al Shifa Hospital were hanging in the balance on Tuesday, according to medical staff there who said there was no clear mechanism to move them despite an Israeli effort to supply incubators for an evacuation.
Three of the original 39 premature babies have already died since Gaza’s biggest hospital ran out of fuel at the weekend to power generators that had kept their incubators going.
The Gaza Strip has been under a total Israeli blockade since Hamas launched an attack on Israel on Oct. 7. An Israeli ground incursion since then has brought fighting to streets around the hospital in the center of Gaza City in the north of the strip.
The 36 babies, who weigh less than 1.5 kg (3.3 pounds) and with some as small as 700 to 800 grams, were now lying side-by-side on ordinary beds, exposing them to infection and without any individual adjustments to humidity levels and temperatures, staff said.
“Luckily they are still 36, we didn’t lose any of them overnight,” Dr. Ahmed El Mokhatallali, a surgeon, told Reuters by telephone from Al Shifa. “But still the risks are really high ... We have still the risk of losing them.”
Israel’s military said earlier on Tuesday it was coordinating the transfer of incubators into the Gaza Strip in a step to allow the evacuation of the babies. It posted on social media an image of a soldier unloading incubators from a van.
The military also posted a video showing Shani Sasson, a spokesperson from an Israeli Defense Ministry liaison office that deals with Palestinian civilian affairs, standing in front of incubators and saying a formal offer of help had been made.
“Extensive efforts are underway to ensure that these incubators right here behind me can reach the babies in Gaza without delay,” she said in the video.
An Israeli official involved in those efforts, who spoke to Reuters on condition of anonymity, said three available incubators had been provided by Israeli hospitals.
“The intention is to enable the safe evacuation of newborn babies. To our understanding, Shifa does not have the necessary transport incubators for that,” the official said, adding the incubators were on standby outside Gaza for any agreed handover.
Images published by the military showed standard transport incubators, said Arthur Edelman, a professor of paediatrics and neonatology at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
“They are battery-operated, which would allow for a couple of hours of running time. They also have the option of plugging into an ambulance power source,” he said.

‘NO CLEAR MECHANISM’
The military did not say what steps it would take to make an evacuation possible, amid intense air strikes and ongoing fighting in the vicinity of Al Shifa hospital.
A spokesman for Gaza’s health ministry, which is under Hamas control, said there was no objection to evacuating the babies but said there was no mechanism to do this.
Many of Gaza’s hospitals, like Al Shifa, have also shut down because of a lack of fuel and supplies, or are already crammed full of patients and those wounded in the fighting.
“We have no objection to have the babies moved to any hospital, in Egypt, the West Bank or even to the occupation (Israeli) hospitals. What we care most is about the wellbeing and the lives of those babies,” Gaza health ministry spokesperson Ashraf Al-Qidra said, speaking by telephone from the hospital. “So far there is no clear mechanism.”
Israel says the hospital is not under siege and says its forces offers exit routes to those inside. Medical staff and officials in the hospital say those trying to leave have come under fire. Reuters could not independently verify the accounts.
Al Shifa’s Mokhatallali said he was aware of efforts to rescue the babies but did not know the details.
“Someone asked us to get the names of the babies and how many there are. But no actual steps on the ground. So we don’t know how serious these efforts are to evacuate these babies,” he said.
The Israeli military posted an audio recording of what it said was a conversation between a senior officer from Israel’s Coordination and Liaison Administration and the director-general of Al Shifa Hospital, speaking in Arabic, subtitled in English.
In it, the official talks about depositing an incubator at the hospital gate, without giving details of how or when that would happen. The director-general says that would help, adding that four respirators for children are also needed.
The official says he will see what he can do to help. The director-general responds that all the wards and staff inside the hospital need help.
Israel has vowed to wipe out Hamas after the group’s fighters rampaged through southern Israel on Oct. 7, killing 1,200 people and taking around 240 hostage, according to Israeli numbers. Its counteroffensive has killed more than 11,000 people in Gaza so far.


Massive displacement from Israel-Hezbollah war transforms Beirut’s famed commercial street

Massive displacement from Israel-Hezbollah war transforms Beirut’s famed commercial street
Updated 10 sec ago
Follow

Massive displacement from Israel-Hezbollah war transforms Beirut’s famed commercial street

Massive displacement from Israel-Hezbollah war transforms Beirut’s famed commercial street
  • Hamra Street’s sidewalks are filled with displaced people, and hotels and apartments are crammed with those seeking shelter
  • During the Lebanon’s heyday in the 1960s and early 1970s, Hamra Street represented everything that was glamorous
BEIRUT: Inside what was once one of Beirut’s oldest and best-known cinemas, dozens of Lebanese, Palestinians and Syrians displaced by the Israel-Hezbollah war spend their time following the news on their phones, cooking, chatting and walking around to pass the time.
Outside on Hamra Street, once a thriving economic hub, sidewalks are filled with displaced people, and hotels and apartments are crammed with those seeking shelter. Cafes and restaurants are overflowing.
In some ways, the massive displacement of hundreds of thousands of people from south Lebanon, the eastern Bekaa Valley and Beirut’s southern suburbs has provided a boost for this commercial district after years of decline as a result of Lebanon’s economic crisis.
But it is not the revival many had hoped for.
“The displacement revived Hamra Street in a wrong way,” said the manager of a four-star hotel on the boulevard, who requested anonymity to speak candidly about the problems the influx has caused for the neighborhood.
For three weeks after the war intensified in mid-September, his hotel enjoyed full occupancy. Today, it stands at about 65 percent capacity — still good for this time of year — after some left for cheaper rented apartments.
But, he said, the flow of displaced people has also brought chaos. Traffic congestion, double parking and motorcycles and scooters scattered on sidewalks has become the norm, making it difficult for pedestrians to walk. Tensions regularly erupt between displaced people and the district’s residents, he said.
Hamra Street has long been a bellwether for Lebanon’s turbulent politics. During the country’s heyday in the 1960s and early 1970s, it represented everything that was glamorous, filled with Lebanon’s top movie houses and theaters, cafes frequented by intellectuals and artists, and ritzy shops.
Over the past decades, the street has witnessed rises and falls depending on the situation in the small Mediterranean nation that has been marred by repeated bouts of instability, including a 15-year civil war that ended in 1990. In 1982, Israeli tanks rolled down Hamra Street after Israel invaded the country, reaching all the way to west Beirut.
In recent years, the district was transformed by an influx of Syrian refugees fleeing the war in the neighboring nation, and businesses were hammered by the country’s financial collapse, which began in 2019.
Israel dramatically escalated its attacks on parts of Lebanon on Sept. 23, killing nearly 500 people and wounding 1,600 in one day after nearly a year of skirmishes along the Lebanon-Israel border between Israeli troops and the militant Hezbollah group. The intensified attacks sparked an exodus of people fleeing the bombardment, including many who slept in public squares, on beaches or pavements around Beirut.
More than 2,574 people have been killed in Lebanon and over 12,000 wounded in the past year of war, according to the country’s Health Ministry, and around 1.2 million people are displaced.
Many have flooded Hamra, a cosmopolitan and diverse area, with some moving in with relatives or friends and others headed to hotels and schools turned into shelters. In recent days several empty buildings were stormed by displaced people, who were forced to leave by security forces after confrontations that sometimes turned violent.
Mohamad Rayes, a member of the Hamra Traders Association, said before the influx of displaced people, some businesses were planning to close because of financial difficulties.
“It is something that cannot be imagined,” Rayes said about the flow of displaced people boosting commerce in Hamra in ways unseen in years. He said some traders even doubled prices because of high demand.
At a cellular shop, Farouk Fahmy said during the first two weeks his sales increased 70 percent, with people who fled their homes mostly buying chargers and Internet data to follow the news.
“The market is stagnant again now,” Fahmy said.
Since many fled their homes with few belongings, men’s and women’s underwear and pajama sales grew by 300 percent at the small boutique business owned by Hani, who declined to give his full name for safety reasons.
The 60-year-old movie theater, Le Colizee, a landmark on Hamra Street, had been closed for more than two decades until earlier this year when Lebanese actor Kassem Istanbouli, founder of the Lebanese National Theater, took over and began renovating it. With the massive tide of displacement, he transformed it into a shelter for families who fled their homes in south Lebanon.
Istanbouli, who has theaters in the southern port city of Tyre and the northern city of Tripoli, Lebanon’s second-largest, has turned all three into shelters where people, no matter their nationality, can take refuge.
This week, displaced people in the Beirut movie theater sat on thin mattresses on its red carpeting, checking their phones and reading. Some were helping with the theater’s renovation work.
Among them was Abdul-Rahman Mansour, a Syrian citizen, along with his three brothers and their Palestinian-Lebanese mother, Joumana Hanafi. Mansour said they fled Tyre after a rocket attack near their home, taking shelter at a school in the coastal city of Sidon, where they were allowed to stay since their mother is a Lebanese citizen.
When the shelter’s management found out that Mansour and his brothers were Syrian they had to leave because only Lebanese citizens were allowed. With no place to stay, they returned to Tyre.
“We slept for a night in Tyre, but I hope you never witness such a night,” Hanafi said of the intensity of the bombardment.
She said one of her sons knew Istanbouli and contacted him. “We told him, ‘Before anything, we are Syrians.’ He said, ‘It is a shame that you have to say that.’”
Istanbouli spends hours a day at his theaters in Beirut and Tripoli to be close to the displaced people sheltering there.
“Normally people used to come here to watch a movie. Today we are all at the theater and the movie is being played outside,” Istanbouli said of the ongoing war.

Israel army says 4 soldiers killed in south Lebanon combat

Israel army says 4 soldiers killed in south Lebanon combat
Updated 24 October 2024
Follow

Israel army says 4 soldiers killed in south Lebanon combat

Israel army says 4 soldiers killed in south Lebanon combat
  • The death toll among Israeli troops fighting in southern Lebanon has risen to 26

JERUSALEM: The Israeli army said on Thursday that four of its soldiers were killed fighting in southern Lebanon, where the military has been battling Hezbollah forces for weeks.
The Israeli army provided the names of the four soldiers in a statement, saying the troops “fell during combat in southern Lebanon” on Wednesday.
The death toll among Israeli troops fighting in southern Lebanon has risen to 26 since the military launched a ground operation in late September, according to an AFP tally based on official military figures.
The war in Lebanon erupted last month, nearly a year after the start of cross-border clashes between Hezbollah and Israeli forces.
Hezbollah began launching rockets at Israel from October 8, 2023, in support of Hamas after the Palestinian militant group launched its unprecedented attack on Israel.


Critic of Tunisia president gets new jail term: lawyer

Critic of Tunisia president gets new jail term: lawyer
Updated 24 October 2024
Follow

Critic of Tunisia president gets new jail term: lawyer

Critic of Tunisia president gets new jail term: lawyer
  • Dahmani, 56, was arrested on May 11 after having already been sentenced to eight months in prison in another case
  • Thursday’s sentence was issued after she claimed in another statement that sub-Saharan Africans in Tunisia, including black Tunisians, faced racism

TUNIS: A Tunisian court sentenced lawyer and media figure Sonia Dahmani to two years in prison on Thursday over comments she made criticizing racism in the country, her legal representative said.
Dahmani, 56, was arrested on May 11 after having already been sentenced to eight months in prison in another case.
Her arrest came when masked police raided Tunisia’s bar association, where she had sought refuge, following public remarks on television the authorities deemed critical in the initial case.
Thursday’s sentence was issued after she claimed in another statement that sub-Saharan Africans in Tunisia, including black Tunisians, faced racism, her lawyer Chawki Tabib told AFP.
She did not provide any details on the statements that landed her the sentence.
Dahmani still faces three other cases, one of her lawyers, Pierre-Francois Feltesse, told AFP.
In September, she was sentenced to eight months in prison over comments — also regarding migration in Tunisia — she made on television.
In a talk show, she had sarcastically questioned Tunisia’s state of affairs in response to claims that sub-Saharan migrants were settling in the country.
“What extraordinary country are we talking about?” she said at the time.
A judicial report later said her comments referenced a speech by President Kais Saied, who said Tunisia would not become a resettlement zone for migrants blocked from going to Europe.
Saied, democratically elected in 2019, has ruled Tunisia by decree since a 2021 power grab. He was re-elected this month by a landslide with 90 percent of the vote.
In both cases, Dahmani was sentenced under Decree 54, a law enacted by Saied in 2022 that criminalizes “spreading false news.”
The National Union of Tunisian Journalists says it has been used to prosecute tens of journalists, lawyers and opposition figures.


Israeli hostage families urge Netanyahu, Hamas to reach Gaza deal

Israeli hostage families urge Netanyahu, Hamas to reach Gaza deal
Updated 24 October 2024
Follow

Israeli hostage families urge Netanyahu, Hamas to reach Gaza deal

Israeli hostage families urge Netanyahu, Hamas to reach Gaza deal
  • “Time is running out for the hostages,” said the Hostages and Missing Families Forum

JERUSALEM: An Israeli group representing families of Gaza hostages called Thursday on Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Hamas to secure an agreement for the release of captives, after new truce talks were announced.
“We demand the Israeli prime minister grant the negotiating team full authority to secure this deal. Time is running out for the hostages,” said the Hostages and Missing Families Forum, adding: “We urgently call on world leaders to exert maximum pressure on Hamas to accept this deal and end a humanitarian catastrophe that has already claimed too many innocent live.”


Israeli raid topples residential buildings in Bekaa, victims trapped

Israeli raid topples residential buildings in Bekaa, victims trapped
Updated 24 October 2024
Follow

Israeli raid topples residential buildings in Bekaa, victims trapped

Israeli raid topples residential buildings in Bekaa, victims trapped
  • Israeli drone chases car between Kahale and Aley in Mount Lebanon, killing the driver and one passenger
  • Beirut’s southern suburb witnessed the most violent attacks since hostilities against Hezbollah increased

BEIRUT: Residential buildings in Khodor, Baalbek, were targeted in Israeli raids on Thursday, leaving victims trapped beneath rubble for several hours. An initial attack left seven people dead and 14 injured.

Residents of the area, where most people rely on agriculture for a living, urged the authorities and the Red Cross to send bulldozers and heavy equipment to rescue those who were trapped.

Attacks continued during Thursday, reaching the city of Byblos for the first time. Israeli warplanes attacked the Almat area, which has no residential homes. Their target is not yet known.

An Israeli drone chased a car between Kahale and Aley in Mount Lebanon, killing the driver and one passenger, who was his brother, and severely injuring two children. Identified as Hussein and Haidar Srour, from the southern border village of Aita Al-Shaab, they were transferred to Hezbollah’s Al-Rassoul Al-Azam Hospital for treatment.

Beirut’s southern suburb witnessed the most violent attacks since the expansion of Israel’s hostilities against Hezbollah, with some 17 raids launched on areas surrounding Laylaki and Haret Hreik.

One residential complex was completely destroyed with a fire visible from far away. Those who live there evacuated the area some weeks ago, traveling to Beirut, Mount Lebanon, Tripoli or the north.

Emergency Committee Coordinator and caretaker Environment Minister Nasser Yassin, in Paris on Thursday for a conference to rally support for Lebanon, said: “Lebanon will need $250 million a month to help more than a million people displaced by Israeli attacks, and to cover the costs of war and displacement consequences on key sectors.”

He said the government response, helped by local initiatives and international aid, only covered 20 percent of the needs of around 1.3 million people. He estimated the damage caused to southern Lebanon, Bekaa, Beirut and the capital’s southern suburb ran to billions of dollars.

The twelfth plane operated by KSrelief as part of the Saudi aid effort landed at Beirut’s Rafik Hariri International Airport on Thursday carrying essential humanitarian supplies including food and medical stocks.

Meanwhile, southern Lebanon was heavily hit, especially Jbaa, Houmine Al-Tahta, Kfar Dounine, Aita Al-Shaab and Beit Lif. The Israeli army continued bombing houses on the outskirts of border town Aita Al-Shaab, while another raid on a house in Yater, Bint Jbeil, resulted in numerous deaths and injuries. Two paramedics were hurt as Israeli warplanes targeted the same area during rescue efforts.

A series of raids on Tyre destroyed a number of buildings, while a motorcycle rider was killed and his passenger injured after being targeted by a drone. Aita Al-Shaab and Ramyah were targeted at dawn by artillery shelling and heavy machine gun fire, while airstrikes on Bori Qalaouiye killed town mayor Hassan Rmeity.

On Wednesday, a Lebanese army officer and two soldiers were killed trying to evacuate the wounded following an airstrike on Yater. They were named as Maj. Mohammad Farhat, Sgt. Moussa Mehanna and Pvt. Mohammed Nazzal.

The General Directorate of Internal Security Forces announced it was mourning Sgt. Ali Jihad Farhat, killed on Wednesday in a strike on his hometown of Arabsalim in the Nabatieh region.

Israeli army spokesman Avichay Adraee said: “The Israeli Air Force planes targeted more than 160 Hezbollah targets, including rocket launchers, military buildings and infrastructure across Lebanon.

“The army found a housing area used by Hezbollah members, as well as dozens of weapons, including Kalashnikov rifles and shoulder-fired rockets, inside a house in southern Lebanon, in addition to combat means including rocket launchers, mortars, weapons and ammunition, and weapons depots containing hundreds of anti-armor rockets and mortar shells.”

Meanwhile, Hezbollah announced it had shelled the St. Jean logistics base between the settlement of Nahariya and the city of Acree and targeted two gatherings of Israeli forces in the settlements of Al-Manara and Misgav Am. It also attacked the settlement of Karmiel and shelled Kiryat Shmona, the city of Nahariya, the city of Safed and the Zevulun military-industrial base in the north of Haifa.

Hezbollah has stopped naming those who were killed since thousands of communications devices exploded in September.