UK-Palestinian Call for ‘Justice’ After Gaza Returns
AFP/APP
London: A British-Palestinian doctor who worked in Gazan hospitals during the Israel-Hamas conflict hopes that the testimony he has given to UK police will lead to prosecutions for war crimes.
Ghassan Abu Sitta, a plastic surgeon specializing in conflict injuries, spent 43 days volunteering in the besieged Palestinian territory, mostly at the al-Ahli and Shifa hospitals in the north.
The 54-year-old has already testified to the Met, the UK’s biggest police force, about the injuries he saw and the kinds of weapons used, as part of evidence being gathered for an International Criminal Court probe into alleged war crimes committed by both sides.
He is due to travel to The Hague this week to meet ICC investigators.
Abu Sitta said the intensity of the war was the greatest of the numerous conflicts he has worked in, including others in Gaza, Iraq, Syria, Yemen, and south Lebanon.
“It’s the difference between a flood and a tsunami—the whole scale is completely different,” he told AFP during an interview in London on Sunday.
“Just the sheer number of the wounded, the size of the calamity, the number of children killed, the intensity of the bombing, and the fact that within days of the war starting, Gaza’s health system was completely overwhelmed.”
The war in Gaza was triggered by an unprecedented attack on Israel by Hamas on October 7, which resulted in the deaths of around 1,140 people, most of them civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official Israeli figures.
In response, Israel is carrying out a relentless bombardment and ground invasion that have killed at least 22,835 people, most of them women and children, according to the Hamas-run Gaza health ministry.
Abu Sitta, born in Kuwait and who has lived in Britain since the late 1980s, arrived in Gaza from Egypt on October 9 as part of the Doctors Without Borders medical team.
“From the very beginning, our capacity was less than the number of wounded we were having to treat. Increasingly, we were having to make very difficult decisions about who to treat,” he recalled.
Abu Sitta remembers one 40-year-old man coming into the hospital with shrapnel in his head. He needed a CT scan and to see a neurosurgeon, but they did not have one.
“We told his children, and they stayed around his trolley that night until he passed away in the morning,” he said.
The hospitals also quickly ran out of anesthetic and analgesic drugs, meaning the surgeon had to perform “really painful cleaning procedures of wounds” without relief.
“It was a choice between doing that or watching them succumb to the wound infections and die from sepsis,” he added.
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