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SydWalker.Info is a personal website. I live in tropical Australia near Cairns. I oppose war, plutocracy, injustice, sectarian supremacism and apartheid. I support urgent action to achieve genuine sustainability and a fair and prosperous society for all. I rely upon - and support - free speech as defined in Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (see below).

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The Wounds of Gaza
February 13th, 2009 by Syd Walker

The Wounds of Gaza, a report orginally published in the Lancet Global Report, deserves the widest possible readership.

The Lancet

The Lancet

Two Surgeons from the UK, Dr Ghassan Abu Sittah and Dr Swee Ang, managed to get into Gaza during the Israeli invasion. Here they describe their experiences, share their views, and conclude that the people of Gaza are extremely vulnerable and defenseless in the event of another attack.

The wounds of Gaza are deep and multi-layered. Are we talking about the Khan Younis massacre of 5,000 in 1956 or the execution of 35,000 prisoners of war by Israel in 1967? Yet more wounds of the First Intifada, when civil disobedience by an occupied people against the occupiers resulted in massive wounded and hundreds dead? We also cannot discount the 5,420 wounded in southern Gaza alone since 2000. Hence what we are referring to below are only that of the invasion as of 27 December 2008,

Over the period of 27 December 2008 to the ceasefire of 18 Jan 2009, it was estimated that a million and a half tons of explosives were dropped on Gaza Strip. Gaza is 25 miles by 5 miles and home to 1.5 million people. This makes it the most crowded area in the whole world. Prior to this Gaza has been completely blockaded and starved for 50 days. In fact since the Palestinian election Gaza has been under total or partial blockade for several years.

On the first day of the invasion, 250 persons were killed. Every single police station in Gaza was bombed killing large numbers of police officers. Having wiped out the police force attention was turned to non government targets. Gaza was bombed from the air by F16 and Apache helicopters, shelled from the sea by Israeli gunboats and from the land by tank artillery. Many schools were reduced to rubble, including the American School of Gaza, 40 mosques, hospitals, UN buildings, and of course 21,000 homes, 4,000 of which were demolished completely. It is estimated that 100,000 people are now homeless.

Israeli weapons

The weapons used apart from conventional bombs and high explosives also include unconventional weapons of which at least 4 categories could be identified.

Phosphorus Shells and bombs

The bombs dropped were described by eye witnesses as exploding at high altitude scattering a large canopy of phosphorus bomblets which cover a large area.

Gaza Burn Victim

Gazan Burn Victim

One area of concern is the phosphorus seems to be in a special stabilizing agent. This results in the phosphorus being more stable and not completely burning out. Residues still cover the fields, playground and compounds. They ignite when picked up by curious kids, or produce fumes when farmers return to water their fields. One returning farming family on watering their field met with clouds of fumes producing epistaxis. Thus the phosphorus residues probably treated with a stabilizer also act as anti-personnel weapons against children and make the return to normal life difficult without certain hazards.

Surgeons from hospitals are also reporting cases where after primary laparotomy for relatively small wounds with minimal contamination find on second look laparotomy increasing areas of tissue necrosis at about 3 days. Patients then become gravely ill and by about 10 days those patients needing a third relook encounter massive liver necrosis. This may or may not be accompanied by generalized bleeding , kidney failure and heart failure and death. Although acidosis, liver necrosis and sudden cardiac arrest due to hypocalcemia are known to be a complication of white phosphorus it is not possible to attribute these complications as being due to phosphorus alone.

There is real urgency to analyze and identify the real nature of this modified phosphorus as to its long term effect on the people of Gaza. There is also urgency in collecting and disposing of the phosphorus residues littering the entire Gaza Strip. As they give off toxic fumes when coming into contact with water, once the rain falls the whole area would be polluted with acid phosphorus fumes. Children should be warned not to handle and play with these phosphorus residues.

Heavy Bombs

The use of DIME (dense inert material explosives) were evident, though it is unsure whether depleted uranium were used in the south. In the civilian areas, surviving patients were found to have limbs truncated by DIME, since the stumps apart from being characteristically cut off in guillotine fashion also fail to bleed. Bomb casing and shrapnel are extremely heavy.

Fuel Air Explosives

Bunker busters and implosion bombs have been used . There are buildings especially the 8 storey Science and Technology Building of the Islamic University of Gaza which had been reduced to a pile of rubble no higher than 5-6 feet.

Silent Bombs

People in Gaza described a silent bomb which is extremely destructive. The bomb arrives as a silent projectile at most with a whistling sound and creates a large area where all objects and living things are vaporized with minimal trace. We are unable to fit this into conventional weapons but the possibility of new particle weapons being tested should be suspected.

Executions

Survivors describe Israeli tanks arriving in front of homes asking residents to come out. Children, old people and women would come forward and as they were lined up they were just fired on and killed. Families have lost tens of their members through such executions. The deliberate targeting of unarmed children and women is well documented by human right groups in the Gaza Strip over the past month.

Targeting of ambulances

Thirteen ambulances had been fired upon killing drivers and first aid personnel in the process of rescue and evacuation of the wounded.
Cluster bombs

The first patients wounded by cluster were brought into Abu Yusef Najjar Hospital. Since more than 50% of the tunnels have been destroyed, Gaza has lost part of her lifeline. These tunnels contrary to popular belief are not for weapons, though small light weapons could have been smuggled through them. However they are the main stay of food and fuel for Gaza. Palestinians are beginning to tunnel again. However it became clear that cluster bombs were dropped on to the Rafah border and the first was accidentally set of by tunneling. Five burns patients were brought in after setting off a booby trap kind of device.

Death toll

As of 25 January 2009, the death toll was estimated at 1,350 with the numbers increasing daily. This is due to the severely wounded continuing to die in hospitals. 60% of those killed were children.

Severe injuries

The severely injured numbered 5,450, with 40% being children. These are mainly large burns and polytrauma patients. Single limb fractures and walking wounded are not included in these figures.

Through our conversations with doctors and nurses the word holocaust and catastrophe were repeatedly used. The medical staff all bear the psychological trauma of the past month living though the situation and dealing with mass casualties which swamped their casualties and operating rooms. Many patients died in the Accident and Emergency Department while awaiting treatment. In a district hospital, the orthopaedic surgeon carried out 13 external fixations in less than a day.

It is estimated that of the severely injured, 1,600 will suffer permanently disabilities. These include amputations, spinal cord injuries, head injuries, large burns with crippling contractures.

Special factors

The death and injury toll is especially high in this recent assault due to several factors:

No escape: As Gaza is sealed by Israeli troops, no one can escape the bombardment and the land invasion. There is simply no escape. Even within the Gaza Strip itself, movement from north to south is impossible as Israeli tanks had cut the northern half of Gaza from the south. Compare this with the situation in Lebanon 1982 and 2006, when it was possible for people to escape from an area of heavy bombardment to an area of relative calm – there was no such is option for Gaza.

Gaza in ruins

Gaza in ruins

The quantity and quality of the ammunition being used as described above.
Gaza’s lack of defense against the modern weapons of Israel. She has no tanks, no planes, no anti-aircraft missiles against the invading army. We experienced that first hand in a minor clash of Israeli tank shells versus Palestinian AK47 return fire. The forces were simply unmatched.
Absence of well constructed bomb shelters for civilians. Unfortunately these will also be no match for bunker busters possessed by the Israeli Army.

Conclusion

Taking the above points into consideration, the next assault on Gaza would be just as disastrous. The people of Gaza are extremely vulnerable and defenseless in the event of another attack. If the International Community is serious about preventing such a large scale of deaths and injuries in the future, it will have to develop a some sort of defense force for Gaza. Otherwise, many more vulnerable civilans will continue to die.

- Dr Ghassan Abu Sittah and Dr Swee Ang

________________________________________

NOTE: On the The Lancet website, the The Wounds of Gaza contains an update on the use of tungsten by Dr Ang, as well as a number of comments.

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9 Responses  
  • Michael Kerjman writes:
    July 13th, 200910:56 amat

    The best way to conclude this report is rooting out a case for Israel’s responding stipulated with steady terrorist anti-civic-Israelis activities exercised by power-hungry islamists in Gaza behind the shoulders of the “vulnerable and defenseless” civic locals.  

    • Syd Walker writes:
      July 13th, 20093:58 pmat

      I’m not sure whether your comment is generated by computer or not, Michael? I’ll give you the benefit of the doubt and put it down to poor programming.  

    • Adam writes:
      July 22nd, 20096:32 pmat

      Thank you, Michael.

      Your English is perfect for those understanding a threat terrorists bring about, in Australia surely.  

      • Syd Walker writes:
        July 23rd, 200911:26 amat

        Hi Adam. Your English is better than Michael’s but your sordid, murder-justifying message is the same.

        Are you one of the new paid pro-Israel posters I’ve been reading about recently?

        Do people like you care at all about the suffering of Gazans? Or have you dehumanized them in your mind, so you can rationalize any level of continuing atrocity?  

        • Joanne writes:
          July 24th, 200911:21 amat

          Syd,

          Do people like you care at all about the suffering of Israelis-the Jews and non-Jews, Christians and Arabs targeted by HAMAS from Gaza?  

          • Syd Walker writes:
            July 24th, 200912:53 pmat

            Yes, I care Joanne. I also care if I stub my toe, but when I do I’m aware of the difference between my condition and the pain of a next door neighbor who is gravely ill.

            I try to keep some perspective on my woes – and I notice most other people do.

            But it’s my observation that Israeli society, as a whole, is not good at this. Each death, injury or discomfort to a Jewish Israeli is treated as at least 100 times more serious than the equivalent to a non-Jew. Some say that’s because of deep-rooted supremacism that’s rooted in the Jewish religion. Others put it down to a society in State of perpetual war that’s come to believe its own war propaganda.

            Whatever the case, it’s surely time this mass stupidity comes to an end – not only for the sake of the people in that region of the world, but for the whole world’s sake.

            So… Israel wanted Gazan resistance fighters to stop firing toy rockets at neighbouring towns? Very understandable. But also understandable that Gazans retaliated against a brutal economic blockade and frequently violent Israeli ‘incursions’.

            The road to peace is not that hard to find. But you do set out on it in good faith (as opposed to finding excuses to avoid it).

            It begins respect for your fellow human beings and compromise. As the occupying power with overwhelming military might, Israel holds the cards. Stop trying to pretend otherwise. Get on with making peace!  

  • Barbara Lubin writes:
    May 3rd, 20094:12 amat

    I am the Executive Director of the Middle East Children’s Alliance in
    Berkeley California and was a close friend of Dr. Swee’s. I lost touch with
    her and would very much like to make contact with her. Is there any way you
    could help? I also was in Gaza during this latest war.

    Thank you in advance for any help you can give.

    Barbara Lubin  

  • DavidG. writes:
    February 13th, 200910:01 amat

    What can one say? Simply that the people who carried out these atrocities are amoral, fanatical savages.

    That they have nuclear weapons poses one of the greatest dangers the world faces. Obviously, if they can do this in Gaza, dropping nukes on Iran and wiping out millions wouldn’t worry them at all.

    I wonder which country they are imitating? Let me guess…  

  • Sally writes:
    February 13th, 20098:42 amat

    Dr Swee Chai Ang, who is a prominent orthopaedic surgeon in England, is no stranger to Israeli brutality, having witnessed and survived the Sabra and Shatilla massacres in Lebanon, after which she co-founded the UK charity, Medical Aid for Palestinians (MAP), and authored “From Beirut to Jerusalem”, not to be confused with the book of the same name written a couple of years later by the odious Tom Friedman, columnist at the New York Times.

    More on Dr Ang here:
    http://www.inminds.co.uk/from-beirut-to-jerusalem.html  


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