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EL-ARISH: Military medical personnel and Palestinians, some on wheelchairs, are seated onboard the French LHD Dixmude military ship, which serves as a hospital to treat wounded Palestinians. -- AFP photos
EL-ARISH: Military medical personnel and Palestinians, some on wheelchairs, are seated onboard the French LHD Dixmude military ship, which serves as a hospital to treat wounded Palestinians. -- AFP photos
French doctors shocked by injuries of wounded Gazans
French ship has received tiny minority of 62,000 patients injured in Gaza

AL-ARISH: On a French warship off the Egyptian coast, wounded Palestinians receive the healthcare that has become largely unobtainable in the besieged Gaza Strip after months of war. Sitting in a wheelchair, Abdulrahman Iyad wrings his hands in his lap, resting them gently near pins protruding from his thighs. He scrolls through his phone, looking at photos of his family, all killed in the blast that tore his own face apart.

“I was sent flying through the air and hit the wall of our neighbors’ house, my leg was trapped under the caved-in ceiling,” Iyad told AFP on the French helicopter carrier Dixmude, which is being used as a hospital to treat wounded Palestinian civilians.

“When I woke up in hospital, my uncles told me they had visited me, but I couldn’t remember a thing.” Iyad’s home, like much of the Palestinian territory where the Zionist entity has waged war since early October, has been reduced to rubble.

The Zionist entity’s relentless ground and air military campaign has killed more than 25,105 people, around 70 percent of them women, children and adolescents, according to figures from Gaza’s health ministry. The entity claims the bombardment is aimed at destroying Hamas after the Palestinian resistance group attacked southern Zionist communities and military bases on Oct 7, 2023. Around 1,140 people, mostly civilians, died in the attack and subsequent Zionist military operation aimed at regaining control of communities targeted by Hamas.

Search-and-rescue missions have become nearly impossible in the territory, meaning thousands have been left trapped and presumed dead under the rubble, medics say. The healthcare system has almost entirely collapsed, with hospitals overwhelmed and doctors having to treat a growing number of casualties with dwindling resources.

A tiny minority

The French warship began treating patients in November, off the coast of the port of Al-Arish, 50 kilometers (30 miles) west of the Egyptian border with Gaza. In the hull of the vessel, a handful of patients and their families gathered around a table, listlessly playing a card game.

Among them was Nesma Abu Gayad, a bright-eyed Palestinian who was seriously injured when her home was shelled. “I was treated at a few hospitals in Gaza, before arriving in Egypt,” she told AFP, the stump of her right foot floating above the ground from her wheelchair. “The next step will be a prosthetic, but I have to get a referral and travel to get it abroad.”

French doctor Marine, who is serving aboard the Dixmude and only gave her first name, said the warship has so far received 120 patients, all serious cases who needed long periods of hospitalization. That is just a tiny minority of the more than 62,000 people who have been injured in Gaza, according to the territory’s health ministry. Another French doctor on the Dixmude, Salle, said she was shocked by the injuries that she had come across. “I’m in the military, so I deal with the war wounds of our French and allied servicemen,” she said. “But what shocked me was to find them on civilians.” — AFP

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