Syria: “Medical Facilities Are Paying an Extremely Heavy Price” Amid Intensified Airstrikes on Idlib

SYRIA 2018 © Omar Haj Kadour/MSF

Intense fighting and airstrikes in northern Syria have escalated since December, resulting in one of the largest population displacements seen since the beginning of the conflict. This violence, concentrated in the south of Idlib and Aleppo governorates and in the north of Hama governorate, is further worsening conditions for people already severely traumatized by seven years of war. Hassan Boucenine, head of operations for Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) in northern Syria, describes the challenges on the ground.

 
What can you tell us about recent events in Idlib governorate?

The Syrian authorities and their allies have launched an offensive on southern and eastern Idlib governorate. One of their objectives was to take Abu al-Duhur military base. According to the United Nations, the fighting and airstrikes have forcibly displaced tens of thousands of people. 

MSF works in some of the places worst affected by the airstrikes. Medical personnel we’re in contact with in other areas have told us of places that have endured weeks of relentless and extremely fierce bombing. They say some [places] have been totally destroyed and reduced to rubble. Yet again, medical facilities are paying an extremely heavy price – like the hospital MSF supports in Saraqib, hit in an airstrike on 29 January.

Read More: Syria: Deadly Airstrikes Damage Hospital Supported by MSF in Idlib

Idlib was already severely overcrowded because so many people had already been displaced. There’s almost nowhere left for them to stay—and it’s winter, so the rain never stops. Conditions are extremely challenging and, despite the considerable efforts of several humanitarian organizations, the displaced are struggling to get basic necessities like fuel and blankets. The situation is tough but not totally desperate for people in towns with health centers and tents [in areas not prone to flooding]. But for those in more remote areas of this rural province, a long way from health centers, it’s dire. 
 

How do you see the situation evolving?

Even if in the past few days the fighting in south Idlib has seemed a little less intense, the airstrikes haven’t stopped. Depending on what happens with the fighting, we might see even more displaced people arriving.
 
The situation in Afrin district makes us think there may be more population displacements. We’re getting ready to assist neighboring hospitals in case of a sudden influx of casualties, and we’re going to prepare our emergency room and inpatient department to relieve the pressure on local surgical hospitals. But it’s very hard for medical organizations in Idlib to imagine having to deal with yet another influx of displaced people. It would pose a serious problem in terms of medical capacity.

You have to understand what these people are contending with. The camps are severely overcrowded and so are the towns. The cost of rent is going up, and food and fuel prices are rising too. As if that wasn’t enough, most of the roads are cut off.
 

What is MSF doing in the area? 

We immediately sent teams to the most remote areas, and to those farthest away from health centers to see how displaced people are coping – the situation is dire. They’re in makeshift camps, miles away from anything. We’ve been running a mobile clinic, donating medicines to clinics that are seeing huge increases in patient numbers, and distributing winter-survival and hygiene kits. We’re preparing another big distribution of blankets to families, most of whom haven’t received any help. We think it’s absolutely vital, given the cold, how difficult it is to get here, and the price of heating fuel.

Right now, we’re focusing on primary health care, organizing the distribution of blankets for 1,000 or so isolated families, referring the sick when necessary, and organizing vaccinations. Many of the families come from places that had already seen heavy fighting, with erratic access to vaccination….

At the very least, these people have been displaced twice in recent years, and some have said as many as four. Bit by bit, these families have lost everything; some only have their tears left.

Read More: Syria: Families Displaced by Fighting Struggle for Survival in Winter Cold