City
Epaper

'Indescribable': Israeli doctors treat hundreds of Armenian blast victims

By ANI | Updated: October 5, 2023 23:35 IST

Tel Aviv [Israel], October 5 (ANI/TPS): An Israeli medical delegation flew to Armenia on Wednesday after an explosion at ...

Open in App

Tel Aviv [Israel], October 5 (ANI/TPS): An Israeli medical delegation flew to Armenia on Wednesday after an explosion at a fuel depot killed at least 20 people and injured hundreds more on September 25. The blast took place in the town of Stepanakert, also known as Khankendi, which is located in the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region, which recently captured by Azerbaijan in a lightning offensive.

Because of the lack of medical facilities and Armenians fleeing Nagorno-Karabakh, the injured are being treated in Yerevan. An estimated 30,000 Armenians fled the region to Armenia.

A 14-person Israeli medical delegation arrived in Yerevan on Saturday at the request of the World Health Organization and the Armenian Ministry of Health, making them the first foreign relief to arrive.

Some of the members of the team which includes plastic surgeons, intensive-care doctors, anesthesiologists and nurses who specialize in treating burns shared their impressions in phone calls with the Tazpit Press Service.

"We are here to do our best, but it's a drop in the ocean," said Dr. Yaron Shoham, director of the burn unit at Beer Sheva's Soroka Medical Center.

"All hospitals here in Yerevan operate in two operating rooms each, three plastic surgeons and two anesthesiologists in each room, in the state of a moving film from morning to night aiming to operate on as many patients as possible," Shoham said.

Dr. Adi Lotan, senior specialist in plastic surgery at Jerusalem's Shaare Zedek Medical Center told TPS, "The extent of injuries is indescribable. The suffering of people is enormous."

The cause of the explosion isn't known, but Lotan said the victims, mostly men ages 20-40, "apparently went to fill up with gas before leaving the area, in a place not intended for that and the explosion apparently caused several more explosions. The assessment there is that it is not an event related to the war."

She added, "We don't know exactly what happened there, but maybe one of the pumps exploded and caused the whole disaster."

The victims will be dealing with recovery long after the Israeli team's three-week mission ends.

"Each of the wounded here is a project of two or three months," Shoham explained. "Medical teams who come here after we leave will have to continue to take care of them for many more months. Each injured person with a major burn requires about ten surgeries." (ANI/TPS)

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalAustralia-Canada-India Technology Partnership to have emphasis on green energy innovation, resilient supply chains including in critical minerals

Entertainment"Everybody loves violence in movies when it's foreign": HAQ director Suparn Varma hits back at criticism of 'Dhurandhar' trailer

International"G20 delivers strong message on disaster resilience, debt, critical minerals and energy transition," says MEA

InternationalPM Modi meets German Chancellor Merz, UK PM Starmer and UN Secretary-General Guterres on G20 Summit sidelines

InternationalPM Modi, Brazil's President affirm working to boost trade, cultural links

International Realted Stories

International"Creating a resilient world for the growth of all": PM Modi during address at G20 Leaders' Summit

InternationalIndia's influence evident in G20 Declaration; leaders condemn terrorism in all its forms and manifestations

InternationalG20 Summit: PM Modi highlights India's human-centric vision, pitches for Critical Minerals Circularity Initiative

InternationalPM Modi meets Malaysian counterpart on sidelines of G20 Summit

InternationalPM Modi meets Ethiopian PM Abiy Ahmed, says both nations' ties anchored in development cooperation