Children’s Hospital Among Two Medical Facilities Bombed in Eastern Aleppo as Withering Attacks Resume

Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) has been able to confirm that two hospitals in besieged eastern Aleppo were hit by airstrikes on November 16, one day after ferocious airstrikes on the opposition-held area of the city resumed.

The hospitals that came under attack were a children’s hospital and a specialized surgical hospital. Both were supported by MSF, among other organizations.

The morning the hospitals were hit, the neighborhood as a whole was reportedly struck more than 50 times. 

The pediatric hospital that was hit is the only specialized hospital for children in the besieged area. Hospital staff managed to move children—including prematurely born babies—from cots and incubators to the basement of the building in order to shelter them from the bombing.

Since the siege began in July, there have been 29 separate attacks on functioning hospitals in east Aleppo. Some hospitals have been hit multiple times and have been forced to close as a result.

Below is a firsthand account from a doctor in one of the besieged area’s few hospitals:  

"Up until Monday, the situation in eastern Aleppo had been relatively quiet for some weeks, with just light shelling. But on Tuesday, the situation suddenly escalated, with more than 100 raids and frightful numbers of people wounded.

In just two hours, between 1:00 p.m. and 3:00 p.m., 55 wounded arrived at the hospital. We admitted 13 people and three people died; the rest we sent back home. The wounded have all kinds of injuries, from superficial wounds to limb injuries to neurological injuries.

When there are massacres going on outside, and large numbers of wounded, we stop everything else to concentrate on treating the injured. Non-urgent operations can be postponed until the shelling has stopped or the surgeon has more time.

When it’s quieter, we can monitor patients for longer, but in bad situations like the one now, we have to discharge them an hour or two after they’ve been operated on.

The most vulnerable patients are the ones with head wounds and neurological injuries—70 to 80 percent of them end up dying.

We see a lot of people with limb injuries, but usually we can’t do anything for them, and it ends in amputations. There’s too little time, and too few doctors, operating theaters, and medications. We don’t have many options.  

On Tuesday, one shell fell about 20 meters away from the hospital, but we weren’t hit. In the past five months, we’ve been targeted five times: once in June, twice in July, and twice in September. Each time, we shut down for a few days to do essential repairs and clean the place up, and then we reopen our doors.

Frankly, you can’t do much to prepare for a bombardment like this. Early last summer we started to excavate under the hospital but, when the siege started, we couldn’t get hold of building materials, so we had to stop. We began to build a wall around the hospital, too, but we haven’t been able to finish that either.

Our generators are all far away from the hospital, in a relatively safe place below-ground level, but the fuel to run the generators is about to run out.

Some medications—such as those for chronic diseases—are already finished. Some painkillers and antibiotics are beginning to run out too.

As the intensity of the bombing increases and the massacres become more frequent, we are seeing more and more patients, and so we are getting through supplies faster. When you have wounded patients, you can’t hold medications back to use later. Treating people’s injuries is our first priority and is more important than anything else.

We hoped that the current stocks would last for 10 days but, if the bombardment is particularly violent, they won’t last for more than three or four days. Sadly, we will be able to do nothing when our supplies run out. But for now, we are doing what we can."

Dr Abu Wasim, a plastic surgeon, stands next to a damaged ward on the upper floors of a hospital in east Aleppo after it was hit by an airstrike in mid-October 2016. He is one of the 7 surgeons left in East Aleppo.