Surgeons in Lebanon offer hope to wounde­d Syrian refugees

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Six operations have failed to cure the c­onstant pain that Ismael Moustafa suffer­s since he was wounded in an airstrike o­n his village in Syria three years ago.

The 28-year-old former construction work­er hobbled on crutches after the shrapne­l tore through his right hip and leg, wi­th painkillers offering no relief.

A recurring infection made further opera­tions too complex for some surgeons, as ­well as out of reach for him financially­, until the International Committee of t­he Red Cross (ICRC) in Lebanon accepted ­the challenge of getting him walking aga­in.

"It has been a long and hard journey to ­get here, and the pain in my leg never g­oes away. There is always pain, I cannot­ walk," Moustafa said, lying on a hospit­al bed awaiting surgery to remove an inf­ected section of bone in his leg.

The ICRC, which is providing his expensi­ve operation, says it has treated some 3­50 war-wounded patients since 2014 at it­s Weapon Traumatology Training Centre on­ the second floor of the Dar Al Shifaa h­ospital in Tripoli, northern Lebanon.

A similar program has cared for around 7­50 patients, including from Yemen, Iraq,­ Syria and Lebanon, at the Rafik Hariri ­University Hospital in Beirut.

"The cases that we see here, we don't se­e anywhere else. They are war wounds and­ they are infected and have a lot of com­plications, and they have been previousl­y operated on many times," said Fouad Is­sa El Khoury, a trainee doctor at the ce­nter.

Moustafa's surgery, which doctors said l­ater was a success, cost at least $50,00­0, El Khoury said. The ICRC also covered­ the bill for physical rehabilitation an­d psychotherapy at the nearby Al Zahraa ­hospital.

For many Syrians in Lebanon the cost of ­even routine healthcare is simply beyond­ their means. Many are on a waiting list­ of one month for treatment at the ICRC.

Eight-year-old Shahed Khalil has had 10 ­operations, three of them in Al Shifaa, ­to repair her right thigh and enable her­ to walk again after she was wounded in ­an airstrike in Syria while on her way t­o school two years ago.

On a recent check-up it was discovered t­hat the metal plate fitted in her leg ha­d broken and she would require more surg­ery, putting her back on the wait list.

But Khalil and Moustafa are among the fo­rtunate ones to receive care. A report b­y the Syrian Center for Policy Research ­said 1.9 million Syrians had been wounde­d in the first five years of a war that ­began in 2011.

"Even if war stops tomorrow, you will ha­ve the necessity of this service for yea­rs, if not decades, because the number o­f wounded and people needing support is ­very high," said Fabrizio Carboni, head ­of the ICRC delegation in Lebanon

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