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91ƵDebilitated by trauma91Ƶ: Nelson aid worker returns from Israel-Hamas war

Paul Caney is a logistics co-ordinator for Médecins Sans Frontières
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Palestinians wounded in an Israeli strike while waiting for humanitarian aid on the beach are treated in Al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City on Feb. 29. Photo: Mahmoud Essa/AP Photo

Paul Caney thought he had a deal in place that would save his colleagues.

In November, over 100 staff members of Médecins Sans Frontières, known in North America as Doctors Without Borders, and their families were trapped at an office and guesthouse in Gaza City. Fighting between Hamas and the Israel Defence Force (IDF) in the surrounding neighbourhood meant they couldn91Ƶt leave the building and evacuate south, as Caney hoped they would do.

Caney, a Nelson native, works as a logistics co-ordinator for Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF). From his base in Jerusalem, Caney negotiated with the IDF for the group to be permitted safe passage through the Wadi Gaza checkpoint a short drive away.

Then on Nov. 18, after a plan was agreed on, five vehicles marked with MSF logos left the location en route to the checkpoint. There wasn91Ƶt room for everyone, so those who had to walk carried white flags.

Confusion ensued at the checkpoint. First the IDF turned away the convoy, then after Caney called again they were allowed to continue but sent to the back of the queue where thousands also waited.

As evening approached, the convoy decided to give up. On their return, they approached a street with an Israeli tank and snipers on rooftops. The vehicles turned onto a side street just as the IDF opened fire. Tank fire hit a vehicle, killing one person inside, and a sniper91Ƶs bullet struck the head of MSF nurse Alaa Al-Shawa who was sitting at the front of another car.

Al-Shawa died a short time later. MSF has since condemned the attack and called for an independent investigation.

91ƵThe next day [the IDF] came, destroyed all our cars and lit the clinic on fire, fired into the office and terrorized a bunch of people,91Ƶ said Caney.

Over 40 people in the group ran away or disappeared, according to Caney. A second rescue attempt was made after Caney hired a bus and two cars to drive up from the southern city of Rafah. But in the early hours of Nov. 24, which was supposed to be the start of a six-day cease fire, the IDF returned and again destroyed the vehicles.

The people remaining left later the same day in the vehicles of other evacuating civilians. They made it to an MSF guest house in Rafah, but had to leave again after a tank shell fired at the building killed a five-year-old girl and one of the drivers.

These are the conditions under which MSF is trying to deliver health care.

91ƵWe have people working for us who have lost everything and they continue to work because that91Ƶs what they cling to,91Ƶ said Caney. 91ƵWe have other people who haven91Ƶt suffered nearly as tragic losses but completely checked out and can91Ƶt work. They91Ƶre debilitated by trauma.91Ƶ

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Nelson91Ƶs Paul Caney is a logistics co-ordinator with Médecins Sans Frontières, known in English as Doctors Without Borders. He organized medical support services in Gaza from a base in Jerusalem shortly from October to January, and plans on returning to the post in April. Photo: Tyler Harper

Caney, who spoke to the Nelson Star after temporarily returning home, joined the non-governmental organization in 1994. Over three decades he91Ƶs worked at MSF postings in Latin America, Eastern Europe, the Middle East and Africa setting up medical facilities, managing staff and organizing everything from supply chains to security details.

The job sometimes requires Caney to work on the edge of active war zones. His first assignment during the Bosnian War in Sarajevo, which was under siege for nearly four years. Caney says that91Ƶs comparable to the conflict in Gaza.

91ƵIt91Ƶs the largest burgeoning humanitarian catastrophe on Earth.91Ƶ

Hamas attacked Israel on Oct. 7, killing approximately 1,200 people, injuring 5,400 others. They also kidnapped 253 people, among them seniors, children and people with disabilities.

Israel91Ƶs retaliation has devastated Gaza. The Palestinian Ministry of Health said Feb. 29 that over 30,000 people had been killed and 71,000 injured. Nearly 8,000 Gazans have been reported missing or under rubble, and 1.7 million people 91Ƶ or 75 per cent of the population 91Ƶ has been displaced.

Caney arrived in Jerusalem on Oct. 23. Prior to the conflict, MSF91Ƶs main role was to bring plastic surgery equipment to hospitals in Gaza. Now it needed to provide emergency health care in a war zone.

91ƵBecause of the violent and extremely volatile situation in Gaza, we can91Ƶt even come up with a program idea because next week the hospital we91Ƶre working in is gone. Or trying to do a mental health program when the entire population is traumatized.91Ƶ

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Palestinians look at destruction after an Israeli airstrike on a residential building of the Ganan family in Deir al Balah, Gaza Strip, on March 7. Photo: Adel Hana/AP Photo

In a situation report published March 3, the World Health Organization said only 33 per cent of Gaza hospitals are considered partially functional, while just 24.4 per cent of primary health care facilities are operating.

WHO estimates 8,000 patients in critical care require medical evacuation out of Gaza, and also reported ongoing outbreaks of diarrheal illness and hepatitis-A.

Famine is also threatening Gaza. A presentation made by aid agencies to the United Nations Security Council on Feb. 27 warned at least 576,000 people are in danger of starvation.

Caney said MSF has been able to bring medical supplies into Gaza, but anything non-medical is restricted if the IDF believes it can be weaponized. That means no construction materials, fuel or generators.

Despite that, Caney said MSF teams are maintaining ongoing surgical and wound dressing operations in Gaza as well as programs for obstetrics and mother-child health. Some staff, he said, have not taken a day off since Oct. 7.

In the background, Caney is in constant communication with the IDF to update them on MSF operations and locations, as well as advocating for the safety of staff and patients. It91Ƶs a dialogue he describes as 91Ƶschizophrenic91Ƶ but necessary.

91ƵIt91Ƶs a point of discussion often with the Israeli military because what they say and what they do is quite different. They talk about the hospitals being protected zones 91Ƶ but in practice, when the shell they are firing hits the fence of the hospital, then obviously they aren91Ƶt respecting the demilitarized zone around the hospital.91Ƶ

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Médecins Sans Frontières USA staff gather at the United Nations headquarters in New York to honour colleagues who have been killed during the war in Gaza and to call for an immediate and sustained ceasefire on Dec. 6, 2023. Photo: Sara Kerens/AP Images for Médecins Sans Frontières

MSF secretary general Christopher Lockyear addressed the United Nations Security Council on Feb. 22 and called for a ceasefire as well as the protection of medical facilities, staff and patients.

Still, there have been small victories. Caney allowed himself to enjoy a beer after MSF converted an unfinished hospital into a functioning surgical centre in less than three weeks with little access to contractors or construction tools.

Caney plans to return to the post in April. He has little hope for the conflict, especially if IDF91Ƶs ground operations expand into Rafah where more than one million Gazans have fled to.

But he would also consider staying long term to help if Israel and Hamas can negotiate a permanent cease-fire.

91ƵIf somehow the hostilities dim and there91Ƶs some concrete decisions made, the rebuilding of Gaza will take decades. I91Ƶll probably be dead before it91Ƶs finished, but I would participate in that. I feel rather emotionally connected to this particular conflict.91Ƶ

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Tyler Harper

About the Author: Tyler Harper

I91Ƶm editor-reporter at the Nelson Star, where I91Ƶve worked since 2015.
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