After heavy bombing near a children's hospital in Syria's divided Aleppo city terrified medical staff rushed to rescue nine newborns. (File Photo)
Beirut, Lebanon:
Terrified medical staff rushed to rescue nine newborns after heavy bombing near a children's hospital in Syria's divided Aleppo city, according to the leading paediatrician there.
In a statement published by The Syria Campaign advocacy group, Dr Hatem, the chief of the Al-Hakim children's hospital, described the aftermath of a raid that struck just outside the facility on Wednesday.
"It was a horrible moment. The nurses were trampling each other to rush the babies to the basement, while many of them started to cry," said Dr Hatem, whose full name was not disclosed.
Government bombardment of rebel-held eastern Aleppo hit within a few hundred metres (yards) of three medical facilities on Wednesday, including near Al-Hakim and near the Al-Bayan hospital, leaving at least 15 civilians dead.
At Al-Hakim, nurses were worried the newborns would breathe in the dust and debris in the wake of the raid, Dr Hatem said.
"As my staff moved the incubators, I went to tell the people in the waiting room to leave the hospital. I ordered them to 'Leave now! There might be a second attack,'" Dr Hatem said.
"We expected that it would happen one day, and today is that day. There are now only 18 incubators left in eastern Aleppo."
The newborns all survived but the hospital was left inoperable.
Founded in mid-2012, the hospital has been forced to relocate multiple times in fear of government raids, said its funder, the Independent Doctors Association.
Syria's brutal conflict has killed more than 280,000 people and has seen hospitals destroyed across the country.
In April, Dr Hatem mourned the death of his colleague Mohammad Wassim Maaz, killed in an air strike at Aleppo's Al-Quds hospital.
Dr Hatem pledged to repair and reopen the Al-Hakim hospital, which served roughly 3,800 patients each month.
"I want every president to imagine that one of these newborns were his own son or daughter. Whatever they would do for their sons if they were bombed, they must do for these newborns."
Doctors in opposition-controlled parts of Aleppo city have raised alarm over medical conditions there, particularly as the last route out into the rest of the province is under near-daily bombardment.
"Aleppans' options are running out," said Dr Samah Bassas of the Syria Relief Network, an umbrella organisation of 60 humanitarian groups in Syria.
"The bombs we are used to. But if we are to be held under siege, hunger and disease will quickly take hold. Even more death is inevitable," she said.
(This story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
In a statement published by The Syria Campaign advocacy group, Dr Hatem, the chief of the Al-Hakim children's hospital, described the aftermath of a raid that struck just outside the facility on Wednesday.
"It was a horrible moment. The nurses were trampling each other to rush the babies to the basement, while many of them started to cry," said Dr Hatem, whose full name was not disclosed.
Government bombardment of rebel-held eastern Aleppo hit within a few hundred metres (yards) of three medical facilities on Wednesday, including near Al-Hakim and near the Al-Bayan hospital, leaving at least 15 civilians dead.
At Al-Hakim, nurses were worried the newborns would breathe in the dust and debris in the wake of the raid, Dr Hatem said.
"As my staff moved the incubators, I went to tell the people in the waiting room to leave the hospital. I ordered them to 'Leave now! There might be a second attack,'" Dr Hatem said.
"We expected that it would happen one day, and today is that day. There are now only 18 incubators left in eastern Aleppo."
The newborns all survived but the hospital was left inoperable.
Founded in mid-2012, the hospital has been forced to relocate multiple times in fear of government raids, said its funder, the Independent Doctors Association.
Syria's brutal conflict has killed more than 280,000 people and has seen hospitals destroyed across the country.
In April, Dr Hatem mourned the death of his colleague Mohammad Wassim Maaz, killed in an air strike at Aleppo's Al-Quds hospital.
Dr Hatem pledged to repair and reopen the Al-Hakim hospital, which served roughly 3,800 patients each month.
"I want every president to imagine that one of these newborns were his own son or daughter. Whatever they would do for their sons if they were bombed, they must do for these newborns."
Doctors in opposition-controlled parts of Aleppo city have raised alarm over medical conditions there, particularly as the last route out into the rest of the province is under near-daily bombardment.
"Aleppans' options are running out," said Dr Samah Bassas of the Syria Relief Network, an umbrella organisation of 60 humanitarian groups in Syria.
"The bombs we are used to. But if we are to be held under siege, hunger and disease will quickly take hold. Even more death is inevitable," she said.
(This story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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