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BEIRUT -- At least 300 seriously wounded residents of an
embattled Syrian town near the border with Lebanon need to be evacuated
for medical treatment, a doctor told The Associated Press on Monday, as
fighting in Qusair raged for the third straight week.
Kasem
Alzein, who coordinates treatment in several makeshift hospitals in
Qusair, said the wounded are being treated in private homes after the
town's main hospital was destroyed during fighting between the Syrian
army - backed by Lebanese Hezbollah guerrillas - and rebels fighting to
topple President Bashar Assad's regime.
Speaking
to us at the BBC from Qusair via Skype, Alzein pleaded for help, saying
evacuation efforts by local medical teams had failed after a convoy was
attacked last week and 13 of the wounded were killed. He said medical
supplies are running out and doctors treating the wounded most urgently
need oxygen to keep the 300 people - mostly women, children and elderly -
alive.
"The humanitarian and medical
conditions are terrible," Alzein said, adding that no medical supplies
have reached the town since the government launched an offensive on
Qusair May 19. "We are treating people in homes in an unsterilized
environment. We tried to evacuate the wounded and we can't. No one is
helping us."
Alzein said 50 abandoned homes
around Qusair have been turned into makeshift hospitals. Four of the
homes have been converted into operating theatres. He said the doctors
had stocked up on medical supplies, but they are running out of
antibiotics, bandages and anesthetics. Oxygen supplies are already
exhausted, he added.
The shelling of the town continued Monday, Alzein told us at the BBC. "Every day we have new wounded."
Appeals
by the United Nations and other aid organizations to allow humanitarian
workers to enter Qusair have gone unheeded by authorities in Damascus
as fighting drags on and neither side has been able to deliver a
decisive blow. Syrian regime troops and fighters from Hezbollah have
gained ground, but rebels have been able to defend some positions and
appear to be dug in the north and west of the town.
On
Sunday, U.N. chief Ban Ki-moon called Syrian Foreign Minister Walid
al-Moallem to express concern over the situation in Qusair, according to
Syria's state-run news agency SANA. However, al-Moallem told the U.N.
chief that the Red Cross and other aid agencies will only be able to
enter Qusair "after the end of military operations there," SANA said.
The
European Commissioner for International Cooperation, Humanitarian Aid
and Crisis Response, Kristalina Georgieva, on Monday said she was
joining the U.N and the Red Cross in appealing for a safe passage for
civilians in the town, describing the situation in Qusair as a
"tragedy."
"All right-thinking people will
join me in appealing for all parties to this savage conflict to respect
the fundamental rights of civilians to safe passage," she said in
statement. "These appeals have been falling on deaf ears. In a moment
like this we must together all raise our voices ever more loudly until
our protests can no longer be ignored."
Also
on Monday, Hezbollah guerrillas fought Lebanese Sunni militants trying
to reach Qusair to join the Syrian rebels. Residents said clashes were
taking place in the Syrian village of Jousih, about 13 kilometers (eight
miles) from Qusair. There were no immediate reports on casualties.
Over
the weekend, three rockets from Syria struck Lebanon's northeast and 18
rockets and mortar rounds hit its eastern Baalbek region, a Hezbollah
stronghold.
From Saturday night into Sunday,
Hezbollah fighters inside Lebanon ambushed Syrian rebels and allied
Lebanese fighters whom they suspected of rocketing Baalbek, a Lebanese
security official said. The clashes were the worst yet inside Lebanon,
where the Syrian conflict has intensified since Hezbollah's involvement
in Qusair fighting has been public recent weeks.
A
Hezbollah fighter and several rebels were killed in Monday's clashes,
which happened in a remote area near the Syrian border, said the
official, who spoke on condition of anonymity in line with regulations.
Elsewhere
in Lebanon, gunmen fired on a prominent pro-Hezbollah Sunni cleric in
the port city of Sidon on Monday but failed to hit him, security
officials said. The attack on Sheik Maher Hammoud increased fears that
the Syrian conflict could re-ignite the country's explosive sectarian
mix that mirrors the one in Syria. Lebanon's 15-year civil war ended in
1990.
Hammoud was fired on by assailants in a
moving vehicle as he walked from his home to the al-Quds Mosque where he
preaches, the officials said. His bodyguards returned fire but no one
on either side was hurt, they said, speaking on condition of anonymity
in line with regulations.
Hammoud is a
longtime supporter of Hezbollah, whose power base lies in Lebanon's
Shiite Muslim community and which is supported by Iran. The group's role
in Syria's civil war has become more apparent in recent weeks as the
group buried dozens of fighters who have been in an ongoing battle for
Qusair.
They fight on behalf of President Bashar Assad's regime, dominated by his Alawite sect that is an offshoot of Shiite Islam.
Sidon
is a majority Sunni Muslim city, and many Lebanese Sunnis back Syria's
Sunni-dominated rebels. It was not clear who was behind the shooting.
Hammoud told Lebanon's private Al-Mayadeen TV that he assumed it was
linked to his support for "Hezbollah's jihad" in Syria.
Rival sectarian factions have frequently clashed inside Lebanon during the 2-year-old Syrian conflict.
In
the north, fighting between Sunnis and Alawites in the city of Tripoli
raged overnight into the early hours of Monday. Security officials said
five people have been killed and 34 wounded since Sunday. They spoke on
condition of anonymity in line with regulations.
By
daytime, fighting had largely subsided although snipers were still
active in the most affected neighborhoods, Lebanon's official news
service said. The army was patrolling the city, and universities,
schools and business had opened, it added.
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