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Column — Medical Workers Demand a Ceasefire in Gaza

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Manage episode 445670775 series 2045294
Inhalt bereitgestellt von Democracy Now!. Alle Podcast-Inhalte, einschließlich Episoden, Grafiken und Podcast-Beschreibungen, werden direkt von Democracy Now! oder seinem Podcast-Plattformpartner hochgeladen und bereitgestellt. Wenn Sie glauben, dass jemand Ihr urheberrechtlich geschütztes Werk ohne Ihre Erlaubnis nutzt, können Sie dem hier beschriebenen Verfahren folgen https://de.player.fm/legal.
By Amy Goodman & Denis Moynihan Palestinians in Gaza have endured more than a year of Israel’s constant bombardment, ground assaults with tanks and troops, sniper fire, displacement and starvation. Armed drones constantly buzz overhead, a reminder that no place in Gaza is safe, and that death could come at any moment. Over 42,000 Gazans have been killed already. Prior to Hamas’s raid on Israel on October 7th, 2023, the Gaza Strip was considered the world’s largest open-air prison, with its impoverished population of 2.3 million walled in by the Israeli military since 2006. Half of the population of Gaza is under the age of 18, born under siege, raised while denied adequate access to clean water, education, employment, nutrition, and freedom of movement. The scale of the violence that Israel, with full US support, is raining on Palestinians in Gaza is without precedent, and is widely considered an ongoing genocide. One of Israel’s stated goals has been to kill Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar, which it claims to have done in Rafah on Wednesday. Will Israel now accept a ceasefire, and will the hostages in Gaza come home? Apparently not. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says the war will go on. The protests in Tel Aviv against Netanyahu, led by the families of hostages, continue. News of the situation in Gaza is hard to obtain, as Israel has barred foreign journalists from entering. Palestinian journalists in Gaza have been doing remarkable reporting, but Israel has killed well over 120 of them in the past year. Some of the best, first-hand accounts of the horrors have come from foreign medical workers. This week, the New York Times published an opinion piece titled, “65 Doctors, Nurses and Paramedics: What We Saw in Gaza,” written by Dr. Feroze Sidhwa, who volunteered for two weeks at the European Hospital in Khan Younis, Gaza. Sidhwa wrote, “I worked as a trauma surgeon in Gaza from March 25 to April 8…Nearly every day I was there, I saw a new young child who had been shot in the head or the chest, virtually all of whom went on to die. Thirteen in total.” The article included three X-ray images showing the upper body of different Palestinian children. Each showed a bullet lodged in the head or neck. “It’s pretty clear that when there’s a pattern — every time any international has been around, for an entire year, on a daily basis, a child has been shot in the head in a place of 2 million people, it seems unlikely to me that that’s an accident,” Dr. Sidhwa said on the Democracy Now! news hour. Rajaa Musleh is a Palestinian nurse who grew up in Gaza. She worked in Gaza City, trapped at one point in the Al-Shifa Hospital for over 40 days. “We received a huge number of injured persons coming to the emergency department, and the majority of the cases, unfortunately, women and children,” Musleh said on Democracy Now! “Many children come without legs, without arms…I witnessed a father holding his children in two bags.” She described the guilt she felt when compelled to leave a dying ten-year-old girl, in order to attend to others who had a chance of living: “Ninety percent of her body was burned. She asked me to stay beside her and hold her hand. I will never, ever forget her burned skin in my hands. I feel guilty because I did not stay beside her in the bed…I feel guilty when she asked me about her mother and father and sister, brothers, and I didn’t respond because the whole family had been killed during the bombing of her house.” Rajaa Musleh continued, “I will never forget the dogs, eating a dead body inside Al-Shifa Hospital at the front of the emergency department.” Netanyahu and his war cabinet are agitating for a wider war, promising an imminent attack on Iran as the United States has sent Israel a high-tech missile defense battery and 100 US troops to operate it. The US also used B2 Stealth bombers to strike Yemen this week. Forgotten amidst the geopolitics, beneath the warplanes and the uninterrupted flow of arms from the US to Israel, are both the Palestinian civilians, trapped with no place safe in Gaza, and the remaining Israeli hostages, seemingly sacrificed by Netanyahu as just another cost of his endless war. Meanwhile, trauma surgeon Feroze Sidhwa will continue telling the world what he saw in Gaza: “I personally wish that Americans could see more of what it looks like when a child is shot in the head, when a child is flayed open by bombs, it would make us think a little bit more about what we do in the world.”
  continue reading

7680 Episoden

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Manage episode 445670775 series 2045294
Inhalt bereitgestellt von Democracy Now!. Alle Podcast-Inhalte, einschließlich Episoden, Grafiken und Podcast-Beschreibungen, werden direkt von Democracy Now! oder seinem Podcast-Plattformpartner hochgeladen und bereitgestellt. Wenn Sie glauben, dass jemand Ihr urheberrechtlich geschütztes Werk ohne Ihre Erlaubnis nutzt, können Sie dem hier beschriebenen Verfahren folgen https://de.player.fm/legal.
By Amy Goodman & Denis Moynihan Palestinians in Gaza have endured more than a year of Israel’s constant bombardment, ground assaults with tanks and troops, sniper fire, displacement and starvation. Armed drones constantly buzz overhead, a reminder that no place in Gaza is safe, and that death could come at any moment. Over 42,000 Gazans have been killed already. Prior to Hamas’s raid on Israel on October 7th, 2023, the Gaza Strip was considered the world’s largest open-air prison, with its impoverished population of 2.3 million walled in by the Israeli military since 2006. Half of the population of Gaza is under the age of 18, born under siege, raised while denied adequate access to clean water, education, employment, nutrition, and freedom of movement. The scale of the violence that Israel, with full US support, is raining on Palestinians in Gaza is without precedent, and is widely considered an ongoing genocide. One of Israel’s stated goals has been to kill Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar, which it claims to have done in Rafah on Wednesday. Will Israel now accept a ceasefire, and will the hostages in Gaza come home? Apparently not. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says the war will go on. The protests in Tel Aviv against Netanyahu, led by the families of hostages, continue. News of the situation in Gaza is hard to obtain, as Israel has barred foreign journalists from entering. Palestinian journalists in Gaza have been doing remarkable reporting, but Israel has killed well over 120 of them in the past year. Some of the best, first-hand accounts of the horrors have come from foreign medical workers. This week, the New York Times published an opinion piece titled, “65 Doctors, Nurses and Paramedics: What We Saw in Gaza,” written by Dr. Feroze Sidhwa, who volunteered for two weeks at the European Hospital in Khan Younis, Gaza. Sidhwa wrote, “I worked as a trauma surgeon in Gaza from March 25 to April 8…Nearly every day I was there, I saw a new young child who had been shot in the head or the chest, virtually all of whom went on to die. Thirteen in total.” The article included three X-ray images showing the upper body of different Palestinian children. Each showed a bullet lodged in the head or neck. “It’s pretty clear that when there’s a pattern — every time any international has been around, for an entire year, on a daily basis, a child has been shot in the head in a place of 2 million people, it seems unlikely to me that that’s an accident,” Dr. Sidhwa said on the Democracy Now! news hour. Rajaa Musleh is a Palestinian nurse who grew up in Gaza. She worked in Gaza City, trapped at one point in the Al-Shifa Hospital for over 40 days. “We received a huge number of injured persons coming to the emergency department, and the majority of the cases, unfortunately, women and children,” Musleh said on Democracy Now! “Many children come without legs, without arms…I witnessed a father holding his children in two bags.” She described the guilt she felt when compelled to leave a dying ten-year-old girl, in order to attend to others who had a chance of living: “Ninety percent of her body was burned. She asked me to stay beside her and hold her hand. I will never, ever forget her burned skin in my hands. I feel guilty because I did not stay beside her in the bed…I feel guilty when she asked me about her mother and father and sister, brothers, and I didn’t respond because the whole family had been killed during the bombing of her house.” Rajaa Musleh continued, “I will never forget the dogs, eating a dead body inside Al-Shifa Hospital at the front of the emergency department.” Netanyahu and his war cabinet are agitating for a wider war, promising an imminent attack on Iran as the United States has sent Israel a high-tech missile defense battery and 100 US troops to operate it. The US also used B2 Stealth bombers to strike Yemen this week. Forgotten amidst the geopolitics, beneath the warplanes and the uninterrupted flow of arms from the US to Israel, are both the Palestinian civilians, trapped with no place safe in Gaza, and the remaining Israeli hostages, seemingly sacrificed by Netanyahu as just another cost of his endless war. Meanwhile, trauma surgeon Feroze Sidhwa will continue telling the world what he saw in Gaza: “I personally wish that Americans could see more of what it looks like when a child is shot in the head, when a child is flayed open by bombs, it would make us think a little bit more about what we do in the world.”
  continue reading

7680 Episoden

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