The Dar al-Shifa (House of Healing) hospital is the most advanced in the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip. There are about 600 patients and somewhere between 200 and 700 medics and administrators on site; figures have varied widely on the number of displaced people there, from 1,500 to 15,000, with an estimate from a doctor on Wednesday morning that 2-3,000 were sheltering at the facility. Israel claims that since it pulled out of Gaza in 2005, Hamas has expanded existing basements under the complex of buildings into a sprawling command centre as part of a broader strategy of using civilians to shield its forces from Israeli attack. Hamas denies this. Since Friday, when Israeli tanks and snipers encircled the facility, an already dire situation has worsened. On Saturday, the hospital said that its last generator ran out of fuel, and yesterday, a health ministry spokesperson said that mass graves were being dug on site to deal with about 100 decomposing bodies. A key question about this morning’s attack is whether it will put those civilians on site in still greater danger, or end the situation rapidly and allow them to escape or get the medical supplies they need. What do we know about the attack so far? At about 1am local time, Israel told officials in Gaza that it intended to raid the hospital complex in “the coming minutes”. Later, the IDF confirmed that an attack was underway and said that it was strictly targeted on an area of the hospital where it said Hamas was operating. It said that its forces had undergone special training for the “complex and sensitive environment” and that medical teams and Arabic speakers had gone in as part of the operation. Dr Munir al-Bursh, director-general of the Gaza health ministry, told Al Jazeera that Israeli forces had raided the western side of the site. There were also reports of tanks inside the complex. A Gaza health ministry spokesperson said that the IDF had reached the basement and was “shooting and carrying out bombings”, while an eyewitness told the BBC that they had seen soldiers entering a specialised surgical department. None of these claims have been independently verified by the Guardian. What impact has the situation had on patients? Before the attack began, the UN said that 32 patients had died so far, as well as three nurses. Those physically able to leave were already frightened to do so: healthcare worker Goudhat Samy al-Madhoun told AP that Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) fired on a group of about 50 who were attempting to flee the facility on Monday despite promises of safe passage. Al-Madhoun said Israeli forces fired on the group several times, wounding one man, who had to be left behind. Without the fuel needed to keep crucial equipment running, the humanitarian situation has been deteriorating rapidly. Munir al-Boursh, a doctor and Palestinian health ministry undersecretary who spoke to the Guardian’s Ruth Michaelson, said that there were no oxygen supplies or light to conduct surgery, and that six operating theatres were out of action. Meanwhile, photographs from Reuters published on Monday showed premature babies weighing less than 1.5kg, who had been removed from incubators, lying huddled together on ordinary beds in an operating theatre. “Yesterday I had 39 babies and today they have become 36,” Dr Mohamed Tabasha, head of the paediatric department, said then. “I cannot say how long they can last.” The IDF has said that it is arranging the transfer of incubators from Israel; Gaza health ministry spokesperson Ashraf al-Qidra said that no such plan was in place before the raid. Israel also says that it left 300 litres of fuel at the entrance to the complex on Sunday but that Hamas stopped the hospital from taking it. But the hospital needs 10,000 litres of fuel a day. Hospital director Mohammad Abu Salmiya told CNN that the Israeli offer would be enough to power the facility for half an hour, and that staff had been too scared to retrieve the fuel given how small a difference it would make. Hospital officials have called for any delivery to be made by a neutral body like the International Committee of the Red Cross. Why is Israel targeting the hospital? |