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Jordan hospital treats war casualties from across Middle East

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The Al-Mosawah hospital in Jordan, run by medical charity Doctors Without Borders (MSF), provides reconstructive surgery to youngsters maimed or disfigured in conflicts across the Middle East.

Shahd Tahrawi was wounded in an Israeli strike on Gaza, Hossam Abd al-Rahman suffered burns in an explosion in Iraq and bombardment in Yemen has left Mohammed Zakaria in need of multiple surgeries.

They all met at the charitable Al-Mowasah hospital in the Jordanian capital Amman, which treats some of the many civilians wounded in conflicts across the Middle East.

"I feel sad when I look around me in this place" seeing "people like me, innocent, simple civilians" whose lives have been blighted by the horrors of war, said Abd al-Rahman, a 21-year-old Iraqi patient.

"They are victims of war, burned by its fires... but had no part in igniting them," he told AFP.

He is waiting for his ninth operation at the Amman hospital, to treat third-degree burns to his face, neck, abdomen, back and hand he suffered in an accident with unexploded ordnance in his native city of Samarra, north of Baghdad.

"I was a child when I was burned 10 years ago," he said.

"My life was completely destroyed, and my future was lost. I left school even though my dream was to become a pilot one day."

Abd al-Rahman, who had 17 surgeries in Iraq before arriving at the hospital in Jordan, said that through "all these painful operations", he hopes to "regain some of my appearance and life as a normal human being".

MSF field communications manager Merel van de Geyn said the hospital has patients "from conflict zones across the Middle East, from Syria, Yemen, Iraq and Gaza".

"We provide them with complete treatment free of charge" and cover the cost of flights, food and other expenses, she said.

In addition to the medical procedures, the hospital places great importance on psychological support.

"They're surrounded by people who have gone through similar experiences... Mutual support truly helps them."

The hospital was established in 2006 to treat victims of the sectarian violence that erupted in Iraq in the aftermath of the US-led invasion, but has since expanded its mission.

In just under two decades, 8,367 patients from Iraq, Yemen, the Palestinian territories, Sudan, Libya and Syria have undergone a total of 18,323 surgeries for injuries caused by bullets, explosions, bombardment, air strikes and building collapses in conflict.

The hospital has 148 beds, three operating theatres, and physiotherapy and psychological support departments.

In one room, four Yemeni patients were convalescing.

One of them, 16-year-old Mohammed Zakaria, had dreamt of becoming a professional footballer, before his life changed dramatically when an air strike blew up a fuel tanker in Yarim, south of the Yemeni capital Sanaa, in 2016.

The blast killed six of his relatives and friends, his father, Zakaria Hail, said.

"The war has brought us nothing but destruction," said the father, sitting next to his son who is unable to speak after recent surgery to his mouth.

جميع الحقوق محفوظة © قناة اليمن اليوم الفضائية
جميع الحقوق محفوظة © قناة اليمن اليوم الفضائية