August 2, 2013
Fadi Annour was just a few days into his job
treating wounded Syrian rebels in a clinic in Lebanon when a group of armed
Hezbollah militia men broke into the compound high in the mountains.
“The clinic
was four days old, and I was seeing a patient. Then another patient ran up to
me and said, ‘Doctor! Doctor! We have to leave because there’s a raid going
on,’” said Annour, a 28-year-old Syrian neurosurgeon.
He rushed to
help four patients into his car and raced from the clinic, which he thought was
safely hidden away from Syrian President Bashar Assad’s capital Damascus and
his Lebanese allies Hezbollah.
Annour was
wrong.
The war that
has claimed more than 100,000 lives within Syria is following wounded rebels,
and those fighting to save them, out of the country.
The location
of Annour’s new clinic, set up by the opposition’s Syrian National Coalition to
treat opposition fighters, is a stark example of just how enmeshed Syria is
with its tiny neighbor Lebanon. The field hospital sits in a pro-Syrian
opposition town a few miles from the Syria-Lebanon border, and right in the
middle of the Hezbollah-controlled Bekaa Valley.
Most Sunni
Muslims in Lebanon support the rebels trying to topple Assad – who is part of
Syria’s Alawite minority, an offshoot of Shiite Islam. But Shiite Hezbollah
fighters based in Lebanon have fought inside Syria in support of Assad’s
government forces.
During a
recent visit, the new clinic was treating around 80 patients for severe
gunshot, burn and shrapnel wounds. All of the men being treated were between
the ages of 20 and 35.
Annour
requested that the name of the town, and the patients’ last names, not be
disclosed in order to protect them from retribution from the Syrian government
and Hezbollah.
The wounded
fighters hidden in the anonymous building with no sign called on the world to
act to boost the rebels.
Nizar, a
Syrian fighter badly wounded in the battle for Qusair, a key crossroads for
supplies in Syria, says the United States and other Western countries should
impose a no-fly zone.
“We are
fighters. A shell lands next to us and we die, hey, that’s life,” said Nizar.
He claims to have defected from one of Assad’s notorious security services, Air
Force Intelligence, to join the rebels. “But if you’re talking about women and
children, and they’re dying, why should they die? They should protect
civilians.”
Nizar, who
called the situation within the country a “human catastrophe,” says he left his
job after the Syrian Army began massacring civilian Sunni Muslims.
Fellow
patient Kassem, 20, was sent to the hospital after shrapnel from a missile tore
his arms apart during in Qusair as well.
He called
the situation in Syria “miserable.”
“Nobody
helps us,” said the former petrochemical engineering student. “We fight alone.
Nobody stands beside us. We need any help. You think a machine gun can fight a
tank?”
The clinic’s
new location is not entirely safe, according to Annour, the neurosurgeon. Two
months ago armed men attacked an ambulance transporting a patient to surgery
and kidnapped him, he said.
“(The
kidnappers) gave us indications that he was alive and well, but now we don’t
know what’s happened to him,” Annour said.
Since then,
the Lebanese Red Cross has refused to transport the clinic’s patients in
ambulances through certain Hezbollah-dominated areas without an army escort.
And private cars carrying patients through those areas have been shot at,
Annour said.
For the most
part, though, Hezbollah and their Syrian opposition enemies coexist inside
Lebanon.
“It’s a
strange situation,” Nizar said. “But Hezbollah doesn’t want to bring the fight
to Lebanon. They’ve said that if you want to fight us, come to Syria.”
Karim says
he’ll do just that when he heals. His family is still in Syria, and he says he
still has a role to play in the war.
“It’s our
land, we will fight, even if we get killed,” Karim said. “We will not give it
up to Hezbollah or Bashar [al-Assad]. No way.”
ED Noor: I almost weep when I read such comments from misguided men who do not seem to recognize the alternatives to al-Assad's rule and what would happen to Syria. What is interesting also is they speak to a rebel with "ethics" about civilians however, we know what the "rebels" really do to civilians.
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