Post operative care near Mosul: Rebuilding lives shattered by war

Emergency trauma surgery is the beginning rather than the end of a long journey to recovery for those injured in Mosul. As such, MSF is running a 40-bed hospital in Hamdaniya, a town south of Mosul, to specifically cater for the needs of those recovering from surgery and attempting to rebuild their lives. This clinic is for now the only facility of its kind in the entire Nineveh province of Iraq and is currently running at full capacity having treated 120 patients since it opened in March. Inside patients receive regular dressing changes for their complicated wounds, some of which are infected due to the nature of war trauma. They also receive physiotherapy and psychological care in conjunction with a team Handicap international. Many patients will require further operations and long periods of rehabilitation before they can return to their families.

Below are the testimonies of eight staff and patients from MSF’s Hamdaniya facility:

 



Ahmed Ali's daughter Dima's feet are seen in this image. Photo: Diego Ibarra Sánchez/MEMO
Ahmed Ali’s daughter Dima’s feet are seen in this image. Photo: Diego Ibarra Sánchez/MEMO

 

Ahmed Ali, patient from West Mosul

“I have been in this hospital for two weeks. My wife and daughter are with me. We were injured in a suicide attack in West Mosul.

Because my brothers and uncles worked for the police we had a lot of problems with IS. They harassed us and tried to enter our house. When the Iraqi forces were close we decided to flee. We walked together with my mother, my brother and his family and our neighbours. It was a group of twelve people. When we were 50 meters from the Iraqi soldiers we passed a house that was almost destroyed. Then a mine exploded under my feet. I was carrying my daughter Dima who was also injured. Suddenly someone came out of the house. It was a suicide bomber. When he was close to my brother’s family he detonated his bomb belt. My brother, his pregnant wife, their son and daughter died instantly. My daughter and son were also killed. My neighbour, his father and two sons died.

The police took me, my wife and our daughter Dima to a small field clinic were we received first aid. Then we were transported to the MSF trauma clinic in Hammam Al Alil. From there my wife and Dima were sent to the emergency hospital in Erbil and I was transported to MSF in Qayyarah. After one day there I was also referred to Erbil. During one month my wife and I had many operations in the hospital. Two weeks ago we arrived here in the post-operative ward in Hamdaniya hospital. My daughter is recovering well, praise to God.

Honestly, there are so many sad stories in Mosul. I am an eye witness and I can tell you that the situation is disastrous. So many civilians are dying. There is constant shelling and IS is killing anyone who tries to flee. In one house five entire families were killed by a coalition airstrike. IS was on the roof and the jets bombed it.

The people in IS are terrorists, we all agree about that. But the jets that come to liberate us, why are they killing us?”

 



A portrait of 5-year-old Faten. She was injured when she was playing in a garden. Photo: Diego Ibarra Sánchez/MEMO
A portrait of 5-year-old Faten. She was injured when she was playing in a garden. Photo: Diego Ibarra Sánchez/MEMO

 

Faten, 5-year-old patient from West Mosul

Told by her father:

“When our neighbourhood in West Mosul was retaken by the Iraqi army we went back to our house. Faten was playing in the garden when a mortar bomb fell in the garden and exploded. Faten was injured in the leg by shrapnel from the bomb. First, we took her to MSF in Hammam Al Alil where she received the first aid. From there she was referred to another field hospital in Bartella for further treatment. Now she is here in the post-operative ward in Hamdanyia hospital. Every day the staff here clean her wounds and puts new bandages on. Faten is a brave girl, she likes to play and laugh butt she misses her brothers and sisters at home and at night she cries. All her 7 siblings are doing well, praise to God”.

 



A portrait of 11-year-old Abdulrahman. at the MSF Post-op hospital, south of Mosul, Iraq. Photo: Diego Ibarra Sánchez/MEMO
A portrait of 11-year-old Abdulrahman. at the MSF Post-op hospital, south of Mosul, Iraq. Photo: Diego Ibarra Sánchez/MEMO

 

Abdulrahman Isa, 11-year-old patient from West Mosul

“I was going to a food distribution when something exploded in the street next to me. I was hit in the chest and arm by shrapnel. First I was treated in a medical post in Aqrab. From there they referred me to MSF in Hammam Al Alil.  Then I passed through many hospitals before I came to Hamdanyia. I have been here for a week now. My family is in Hay Maoumon, a liberated area of West Mosul.”

 



A portrait of 51 year old Shamel. He is from West Mosul and was injured on March 7th by a helicopter fire. Photo: Diego Ibarra Sánchez/MEMO
A portrait of 51 year old Shamel. He is from West Mosul and was injured on March 7th by a helicopter fire. Photo: Diego Ibarra Sánchez/MEMO

 

Shamel Hashim, 51-year-old patient from West Mosul

“I was inside a house in Mosul, it was on March 7. There were clashes in the area between IS and the Iraqi forces. A helicopter was shooting at IS fighters in the street. One bullet entered through the window and hit the wall next to me. The ricochet touched my chest and then hit the arm, shattering the bone. My brother who is a nurse was there and could give me first aid. I was operated on in a field hospital twice was sent home after the 2nd surgery. But the wound wouldn’t heal well, it became infected. So I was admitted here in Hamdanyia hospital for post-operative care. Now it is getting better. My son is here with me in the hospital. The rest of the family is in East Mosul.”

 



Aswan works at the MSF Post-op hospital, south of Mosul, Iraq. She has been working for MSF for the last two weeks. Photo: Diego Ibarra Sánchez/MEMO
Aswan works at the MSF Post-op hospital, south of Mosul, Iraq. She has been working for MSF for the last two weeks. Photo: Diego Ibarra Sánchez/MEMO

 

Aswan Ismael, MSF nurse from Mosul

“I’m from Al Hathba in East Mosul. We stayed there during the offensive. It was very scary with the shooting and shelling, there were dead bodies in the street. But we couldn’t leave the city, it was dangerous and too expensive. I continued to work in the general hospital when IS came in 2014, but the women were treated very badly and when they tried to beat me with a stick I quit. I stayed home for more than a year.

I first studied electrical engineering but changed to nursing because I wanted to help people. I like the job here with MSF. We take care of patients after their surgery and we help them recover. I also work one day a week in the general hospital in Al Hathba. It’s hard though because they have a shortage of everything; drugs, equipment, money. We don’t get paid actually.

The security is still not good in East Mosul, and we only leave the house to get the essential things like food and water. We have no electricity and no water in the house.”

 



A portrait of Sara at the MSF Post-op hospital, south of Mosul, Iraq. She has been working as a nurse for the last 7 years. Photo: Diego Ibarra Sánchez/MEMO
A portrait of Sara Younis at the MSF Post-op hospital, south of Mosul, Iraq. She has been working as a nurse for the last 7 years. Photo: Diego Ibarra Sánchez/MEMO

 

Sara Younis, MSF Nurse from Mosul

“I have been a nurse for seven years. I was working in a hospital in Mosul when IS came. We moved to Qayyarah and I continued for a while but in the end, I had to leave the job. To be safe it was best to stay away from them as much as possible. I suffered when I couldn’t work because I really like being a nurse.

Now I work in shifts of six days for MSF in the post-operative ward in Hamdanyia hospital. The week I’m off I work one day in the primary healthcare centre in Qayyarah.

I have seen too many horrible things. We have co-existed with war and violence for a long time. Now I can hardly believe that we have been liberated. I still have hope for Mosul, that it can become a nice place again.”

 



Oday Suleiman has been working as a nurse in Mosul for the last 11 years.
Oday Suleiman has been working as a nurse in Mosul for the last 11 years. Photo: Diego Ibarra Sánchez/MEMO

 

Oday Suleiman, MSF Nurse from Bartella

“I studied nursing in Mosul. I have worked as a nurse for 11 years now. I used to work in Mosul and later in Hamdaniya, but in 2014 we had to flee to Erbil. We are Shabak, a religious minority in Iraq, and we were afraid that IS would hurt us.

Now I have returned to Hamdaniya, but our house is destroyed. I come here only to work when I’m not on shift with MSF I work one day per week in Hamdaniya hospital. Many of the buildings are out of use now as they were heavily damaged in the fighting. We lack almost everything in the hospital – drugs and equipment.”

 



Faisal Dakhil Khalaf is a nurse at the MSF Post-op hospital, South of Mosul, Iraq.
Faisal Dakhil Khalaf is a nurse at the MSF Post-op hospital, South of Mosul, Iraq. Photo: Diego Ibarra Sánchez/MEMO

 

Faisal Dakhil Khalaf, Nurse from Sinjar

“I live in a refugee camp in Dohuk. It has been almost three years now since we fled Sinjar to escape IS. The first seven days we hid in the mountains without food or water. I would like to leave the camp, life there is bad because there is no electricity, no services, and we still live in tents. But we can’t go back to Sinjar, it is not safe. I became a nurse for humanitarian reasons, to help people. It is an important work.”



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