Where Compassion Lies
"I was so happy to be in communication with you and I hope that we can stay in communication, if God decides that. Please say hello to your families for me and I hope you arrive safely."The Nusra Front, famously, bears the imprimatur of Al-Qaeda. "May good reward every person who sought to resolve this problem", said a nun, recently released from three-months' captivity by the Nusra Front rebels. Held hostage by the rebels, an exchange was made for their release through an agreement, rare as it was, between the regime and the rebels, seeking themselves the release of 150 female Syrians taken prison by government troops.
Nusra Front rebel
Qatar had mediated the exchange. Known for its support of the rebels, it seems to spare no effort to ameliorate fraught situations. The video revealed a dialogue between the nuns and the rebels that appeared peculiar in the familiarity with which each addressed the other. One rebel's voice is heard to state: "What we did was less than what we should have done", off camera. God, he said, would favour the nuns for their suffering.
"Syria, which does not differentiate between Muslims and Christians, is targeted ... by the armed terrorist groups who don't understand anything but the language of killing and destruction", he thundered.And then, there's another facet to the situation prevailing in Syria where the government forces use all means at the disposal of a head of state who is completely involved in restoring the status quo by destroying the country's infrastructure, demolishing entire neighbourhoods and heritage places of worship, while using crude bombs to persuade rebel forces that the military intends to crush them, just incidentally slaughtering innocent civilians in the process.
A government that doesn't hesitate about using weapons of mass destruction against its vulnerable civilians, strafing and bombing neighbourhoods, abducting, torturing and killing those whom it suspects shelter rebels in their areas, in its zeal to destroy all opposition to its continued rule. And which has left its health care system in ruins, on the brink of collapse, where medical personnel are forced to use "brutal medical practices" to save lives.
Hospitals have been bombed by government forces in rebel-held areas. Armed men, fighting for the opposition force their way into clinics for emergency treatment for injured fighters. Doctors flee the country to escape the vortex of lunacy. "This humanitarian crisis has fast become a health crisis. The desperate measures to which medical personnel are resorting to keep children alive are increasingly harrowing", advised Roger Hearn, regional director of Save The Children.
Labels: Atrocities, Conflict, Health, Medicine, Religion, Revolution, Syria
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