Syria
— unacceptable humanitarian failure
Joanne Liu ; The international president of MSF; Her
time with the organization started in 1996 when she worked with Malian
refugees in Mauritania
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JAKARTA
POST, 15 Maret 2015
As
Syria enters its fifth year of conflict, the war continues to be defined by
brutal violence that does not distinguish between civilians and combatants.
Hundreds
of thousands of people have been killed, and half the population has fled
either within Syria or into neighboring countries. Syrian cities are besieged
and cut off from any outside assistance. People are trapped between the ever
shifting front-lines as government troops and myriad armed opposition forces
wage battle.
Thousands
of doctors, nurses, pharmacists and paramedics have either been killed,
kidnapped, or displaced by violence, leaving a massive gap in medical
expertise and experience. From an estimated 2,500 doctors working in Aleppo
at the beginning of the conflict, fewer than 100 remain in the hospitals
still operating in the city.
The
Syrian people’s cries for help fill social media, but it seems they have
become the background murmur of the Syrian war. With millions of people in
need of assistance, Doctors Without Borders should be running some of the
largest medical programs in its 44-year history. Why isn’t it?
When
the conflict began, MSF began providing supplies to networks of Syrian
medical personnel treating the wounded. We were unable to obtain
authorization from the government to work inside the country. But by directly
engaging opposition groups, we managed to negotiate access to areas they held
in the north, and began providing direct, cross-border aid to the population.
By
2013, we were running six hospitals in opposition-held areas, providing
thousands of consultations, deliveries and surgical interventions.
Negotiations with the numerous armed groups, while challenging, allowed us to
send international medical teams to work side-by-side with Syrian colleagues.
We
had to repeatedly negotiate agreements with different local commanders to
ensure respect for our presence, for the safety of our teams and for
non-interference with our medical activities.
The
groups changed frequently, and we renegotiated agreements with commanders
from Jeish el Mujahideen, Islamic Front, Jabhat al-Nusra, different factions
of the Free Syrian Army, and the Islamic State (ISIS), among others.
However,
we were never able to provide direct assistance to the majority of the Syrian
people caught up in the heart of the conflict. Violence and insecurity,
attacks on health facilities and medical workers, and the absence of
government authorization to work in Syria have been some of the main
obstacles to extending medical activities. Yet, however unsatisfied we were
with our limitations, we were still doing more than what we can do today.
In
mid-2013, when fighters with ISIS (renamed IS in 2014) arrived in areas where
MSF had been running most of its hospitals, agreements were reached with
their commanders that they would not interfere with the medical management of
the hospitals and that MSF medical structures and staff would be respected.
However,
on Jan. 2, 2014, ISIS abducted 13 MSF staff members. Among them were eight
Syrian colleagues who were released after a few hours. The remaining five
international staff members were held captive for up to five months. The
abduction precipitated the withdrawal of our international teams and the
closure of MSF health facilities in ISIS-held areas.
Local
leaders of the newly renamed IS have repeatedly requested that MSF resume its
medical assistance in their areas of control. But IS targeted our teams and
broke an agreement it had committed to. Guarantees have not been obtained
from IS leadership that MSF patients and staff will not be taken or harmed.
MSF still operates three hospitals run by MSF Syrian staff, one in Atmeh and
two in Aleppo, in addition to three other health structures in northern
Syria. But assistance is limited.
Aerial
bombardments in Aleppo have killed and wounded thousands and have destroyed
houses and infrastructure. In eastern Aleppo, access to health care is now
virtually impossible due to lack of supplies and qualified medical staff. MSF
teams have observed an increase in medical complications, such as a rise in
obstetric complications, miscarriages and preterm births.
While
we have been forced to reduce direct medical activities in Syria, we have
continued to support Syrian medical networks in their tireless quest to treat
patients.
Medical
supplies are dispatched along dangerous roads dotted with checkpoints. The
probability of confiscation of materials, arrest or even death is high.
This
form of support falls far short of what is needed. Many of the supported
facilities still lack equipment and are short staffed, and we are unable to
provide direct assistance to meet the needs.
A
medical director in a besieged area near Damascus said his makeshift hospital
received 128 wounded patients after a severe bombing of a crowded market. His
team managed to save 60 people, but 68 patients died.
MSF
teams are working in some of the most complex war zones, from Afghanistan to
South Sudan to Yemen. An MSF trauma center I recently visited in northern
Afghanistan illustrates the sort of assistance MSF should be able to provide
to the population in Syria.
In
an 80-bed trauma center run by MSF in the northern Afghan city of Kunduz,
combatants lie in beds next to former enemies or alongside civilians, all in
need of medical care. Afghan colleagues and international staff in the
hospital are accepted by all groups in this contested part of the country.
Safe
working conditions and medical non-interference have been negotiated with all
stakeholders and actors, including the Afghan government, Taliban leadership
(Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan) and with American-led ISAF forces.
A
large-scale international humanitarian effort in Syria will not happen until
the parties to the conflict engage with aid organizations and identify
practical steps to permit them to operate safely and effectively. All the
armed parties must allow humanitarian access to civilians, as they are
obliged to do under international humanitarian law.
The
people of Syria have suffered unimaginably over the last four years. The
continued obstruction of humanitarian aid greatly compounds their misery. The
people of Syria are being denied the most fundamental assistance and the
world cannot continue to look away. We can and must do more for them. ●
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