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. 2006 Jul 29;333(7561):217. doi: 10.1136/bmj.333.7561.217-a

Israel attacks Red Cross ambulances

Owen Dyer 1
PMCID: PMC1523489  PMID: 16873841

The first reports of attacks on Lebanese medical staff emerged last weekend, as Israeli aircraft destroyed two Lebanese Red Cross ambulances that were bringing wounded civilians to the Najm Hospital in Tyre.

Figure 1.

Figure 1

Ahmad Ali, whose legs were amputated at a Beirut hospital after Israeli planes hit Blida, in southern Lebanon (left), and a man in Sieff Hospital in Israel being treated for shock after rocket attacks in Safed

Credit: AHIKAM SERI/PANOS AND AP

Six Red Cross staff were injured in the attack on Sunday night, and three patients with light shrapnel wounds who were being transported sustained critical injuries. Kassem Chalaan, the driver of the first ambulance hit, told the BBC that the second vehicle was struck immediately when it radioed for help. Both vehicles were clearly marked with flashing sirens and spotlights directed on to the Red Cross symbol, Mr Chalaan said.

Lebanon's minister for public health, Mohammed Jawad Khalifa, reported two earlier attacks on ambulances, although these were not Red Cross vehicles. One attack occurred near Burjel-Shemali. The driver lost an arm, and two passengers were injured. The other took place on the Zahrani bridge, scene of frequent Israeli air strikes. The driver lost both legs.

The health ministry is compiling data on all killed and wounded civilians to present to the United Nations. As the BMJ went to press on Tuesday the official count stood at 384 Lebanese dead, including 20 soldiers and 11 Hizbollah guerrillas. A total of 1595 people had been injured.

Dr Khalifa predicted that the country would begin to run out of medical supplies in five days. But the distribution is patchy, and supplies are already running low in some cut-off areas, he said. A hospital pharmacist in Baalbek had called the Lebanese Red Cross in Beirut to report that supplies were low and that drugs for patients with hypertension and diabetes had run out.

In Beirut, 30 patients were reported injured by flying glass after a bomb detonated outside the Sahel General Hospital on Saturday.

A two person team dispatched by Médecins du Monde to the hospital in Tyre reported that they had hoped to send emergency kits by boat from Beirut on Wednesday.

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