by Elhanan Miller
After treatment in Jewish state, paralyzed kids return home to war-torn country with donated wheelchairs

Nihad
 and her father at the Western Galilee Hospital in Nahariya, March 11, 
2014 (photo credit: courtesy/Western Galilee Hospital)
NAHARIYA — Syrian children are 
being intentionally targeted by snipers aiming to paralyze rather than 
kill them, an Israeli doctor told The Times of Israel.
Dr.
 Yoav Hoffman, a senior physician at the pediatric intensive care unit 
of Western Galilee Hospital in Nahariya said that his department has 
received 25 seriously injured Syrian children since last July, delivered
 to the hospital by the IDF.
        
        
Located 10 kilometers (6 miles) from the 
border with Lebanon, Western Galilee Hospital has treated a total of 230
 Syrians since March 2013, many of them sent to the facility’s new 
neurosurgery department.
Hoffman said that up to six of his unit’s 
patients have displayed distinct bullet injuries that indicate 
intentional sniper targeting.
“The injuries are very specific: gunshot 
wounds from a single bullet to the lumbar spine, near vertebrates 2 and 
3,” Hoffman told The Times of Israel. “These shootings are not intended 
to kill, but to cause misery. They result in paralysis or slow death in 
Syria’s conditions.”
Hoffman said that he had never seen such 
injuries outside the battlefield; his colleagues initially believed that
 the spinal injuries were a coincidence. But when patients displaying 
the same injuries kept coming in, the hospital staff was “moved to 
tears” as it realized that the children were being targeted.
Most of the children treated in Nahariya have 
received little or no treatment in the field in Syria, Hoffman noted, 
adding that the children often arrive alone with no medical records. In 
addition to bullet wounds, children typically arrive with 
multi-traumatic injuries resulting from explosions.
Such is the case of three-year-old Nihad (not 
her real name), collected by the Free Syrian Army with her father after a
 government bombardment of their home in Daraa on February 19. Nihad 
lost her twin brother in the attack and sustained a severe head injury.
“The treatment here is excellent,” says 
Nihad’s father, who became overwhelmed by emotion as he described the 
horrible sight of his slain son. He is now preparing to return to Syria 
in the coming days with his daughter.
Well over 1,000 Syrians have been treated by Israel so far, 700 of them in a field hospital set up by the military near the frontier on the Golan Heights and others in civilian hospitals across northern Israel.
The children left paralyzed will return home to Syria in wheelchairs donated by the Friends of the Western Galilee Hospital, Hoffman said.
“You can tell they’re extremely scarred emotionally,” he said. “But they’re very grateful for the treatment.”
Elhanan Miller
Source: http://www.timesofisrael.com/israeli-doctor-syrian-children-targeted-by-snipers/
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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