As Mom Denied Access by Zionist Regime
Sick Gazan Newborns Die Alone in Hospital
GAZA STRIP (Dispatches) – A Gazan mother says the Zionist regime denied her access to her three ill newborn babies because her travel permit expired. Instead, she learned by phone that two of her kids died, and waited months to see her surviving daughter.
Diagnosed with early labor, Hiba Swailam, 24, obtained a permit from the occupying regime to leave Gaza and travel to al-Quds, where she gave birth to seriously underweight triplets at Makassed Hospital. She could not stay with her children because the permit had expired, so the young mother was forced to return home.
"I told them I at least want to stay to breastfeed the babies, and they said ‘No’,” Hiba told RT, adding, "I kept crying. It wasn’t easy for me to leave them. I didn’t know if they would live or die, and I went home devastated."
As result, Hiba was not with her children when the two of them died at the hospital. She was informed of their death over the phone instead. The surviving child had spent several months at the hospital away from her parents, before the regime’s authorities issued a permit for the family to pick up the baby.
"I had to endure a lot of suffering and depression, but thank God, all of it went away when I saw my daughter,” Hiba’s husband, Mohammad, said.
Ghada Majadleh, who works for the medical NGO, Physicians for Human Rights – Israel, told RT that there is no specific time period for regime authorities to issue permits for Gazans to travel to the occupied territories for medical purposes, stating that the process can take anything from a month to over a year in some cases.
"The separation of the kids and their parents influences... their recovery and the process of treatment itself," she noted.
Palestinian minor Youssef Abu Zarifa, wounded during clashes along the border between the Gaza Strip and Israeli-occupied territories, receives treatment at a hospital in Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip on September 28, 2018.
Diagnosed with early labor, Hiba Swailam, 24, obtained a permit from the occupying regime to leave Gaza and travel to al-Quds, where she gave birth to seriously underweight triplets at Makassed Hospital. She could not stay with her children because the permit had expired, so the young mother was forced to return home.
"I told them I at least want to stay to breastfeed the babies, and they said ‘No’,” Hiba told RT, adding, "I kept crying. It wasn’t easy for me to leave them. I didn’t know if they would live or die, and I went home devastated."
As result, Hiba was not with her children when the two of them died at the hospital. She was informed of their death over the phone instead. The surviving child had spent several months at the hospital away from her parents, before the regime’s authorities issued a permit for the family to pick up the baby.
"I had to endure a lot of suffering and depression, but thank God, all of it went away when I saw my daughter,” Hiba’s husband, Mohammad, said.
Ghada Majadleh, who works for the medical NGO, Physicians for Human Rights – Israel, told RT that there is no specific time period for regime authorities to issue permits for Gazans to travel to the occupied territories for medical purposes, stating that the process can take anything from a month to over a year in some cases.
"The separation of the kids and their parents influences... their recovery and the process of treatment itself," she noted.
Palestinian minor Youssef Abu Zarifa, wounded during clashes along the border between the Gaza Strip and Israeli-occupied territories, receives treatment at a hospital in Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip on September 28, 2018.