Special report: Palestine-Israel
Relations
GAZA, Feb. 20 (Xinhua) -- With heartbreak, Muoen al-Wadia, a Palestinian
father of six, looks at his amputated leg in his room at al-Shifa hospital in
Gaza City in northern Gaza Strip. His sons and daughters are standing by,
woefully looking at him.
On Jan. 15, the 48-year-old mechanic was at his workshop in southeastern
Gaza City where Israeli tanks operated nearby.
He rushed out to evacuate a man who was wounded when an Israeli missile
exploded. But as soon as al-Wadia got there, an Israeli tank shell landed,
killing the injured man and seriously wounding al-Wadia.
"I saw his body scattered and torn ... And I lost much blood," he said.
"This is my fate."
Al-Wadia was rushed to al-Shifa hospital, the largest on in Gaza City, and
survived the incident. But his left leg was cut and his right leg was also
damaged.
One month later, he is on track to recover physically. But mentally, he is
much worried, not only about the future of his six children and who will provide
for them, but also about his serious injury as medicine, healthcare tools and
even power are running out due to the Israeli siege.
The coastal strip, run by Hamas since last June, boasts a total population
of nearly 1.5 million and heavily depends on outside aid inflow of almost
everything, from basic foodstuffs to medicine.
Following last June's infighting between rival Palestinians movements Hamas
and Fatah, Israel tightened siege against Gaza by closing all border crossings
and had almost brought a humanitarian crisis to the Gaza Strip.
On Jan. 15, after a field tour to Gaza City, UN undersecretary general for
humanitarian affairs John Holmes said he was shocked by the miserable situation
in the poor enclave.
Gaza situation is "grim and miserable and not in any sense normal or in
accordance with basic human dignity," said Holmes, who then visited al-Shifa
hospital.
Hospital officials told Holmes that the hospital was facing a possible
breakdown of overburdened generators and that it needed spare parts for medical
machinery.
Hassan Khalaf, the new director of al-Shifa hospital, told Xinhua that
situation in his hospital was "heading for a disaster."
Since last June, a few sorts of medicine, along with basic foods, were
allowed to flow into the impoverished enclave.
Based on the World Health Organization's list of essential medicine, 90
sorts of medicine are missing in the Gaza Strip while the remaining 390 sorts,
including analgesics, could last for less than three months, Khalaf said.
As s result, al-Wadia's family was forced to buy analgesic drugs from
private pharmacies, where prices were much higher.
Israel's siege and reduced fuel supply had also led to frequent power
cutoffs that affects large parts of the Gaza Strip, which threatens lives of
tens of patients who depend on power to run dialysis equipment and respirator
systems, Khalaf said.
If the power was cut off and the hospital's generators stopped,30 premature
newborns, placed in incubations, will die, he said.
Over the past six months, "al-Shifa hospital dealt with 100 martyrs and
about 230 cases of injuries that resulted from Israeli attacks," Khalaf said.
"In recent weeks, we have no choice but to reduce food we offer to patients
and stopped all the meals for the medical staff," he added.