Gavriel Friedson, right, and Daniel Shore, medics for United Hatzalah, a network of volunteer medics across Israel, help to load a patient into an ambulance on June 14, 2016 in Jerusalem. Menahem Kahana/AFP
Gavriel Friedson, right, and Daniel Shore, medics for United Hatzalah, a network of volunteer medics across Israel, help to load a patient into an ambulance on June 14, 2016 in Jerusalem. Menahem Kahana/AFP
Gavriel Friedson, right, and Daniel Shore, medics for United Hatzalah, a network of volunteer medics across Israel, help to load a patient into an ambulance on June 14, 2016 in Jerusalem. Menahem Kahana/AFP
Gavriel Friedson, right, and Daniel Shore, medics for United Hatzalah, a network of volunteer medics across Israel, help to load a patient into an ambulance on June 14, 2016 in Jerusalem. Menahem Kaha

Palestinian and Israeli medics caught in turmoil of conflict


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DAHRIYA, PALESTINIAN TERRITORIES // When a Palestinian doctor stopped to help a family of Israelis targeted in a West Bank shooting, it was hailed as a rare moment of compassion in a bitter conflict.

Ten months of violence between Israelis and Palestinians have deepened suspicions between the two sides, with doctors and medics saying they come under greater scrutiny at times of increased tensions.

Some Israeli and Palestinian medics say they have been attacked while working, but all insist that politics is far from their minds when they respond to a medical emergency.

Ali Shroukh, who lives in the town of Dahriya in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, said he did not think twice when he rushed to assist the Israeli shooting victims, and rejected the label “hero”.

Mr Shroukh was on his way to Al Aqsa mosque in Jerusalem on July 1 when shots were fired at a car carrying a family of Israeli settlers south of the flashpoint West Bank city of Hebron, causing a crash that killed the father.

He stopped to help even though he knew from the car’s number plate that the passengers could be Israeli settlers.

“I am not a hero,” Mr Shroukh said. “I followed my religion, my conscience and my profession. It is a humanitarian mission to stop and help.”

Besides, he said, doctors “make an oath to help an enemy before a friend”.

Mr Shroukh has received messages of congratulations from around the world, including from Palestinian and Israeli doctors, praising him for putting politics aside.

But keeping politics out of the medical profession, like most things in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, is near impossible. Medics have been accused of bias and of abandoning wounded people from the other side.

One example of this was in Jerusalem.

The Israeli government does not formally draw a distinction between predominantly Jewish west Jerusalem and Palestinian-dominated east Jerusalem, which Israel occupied in 1967 and later annexed.

But the Israeli medical service Magen David Adom (MDA) says it will only enter parts of east Jerusalem with a police escort for security reasons – which medics say can lead to delays of more than 30 minutes in people receiving vital treatment.

In their absence, the Palestinian Red Crescent (PRCS) tries to fill the gap, while MDA first responders who live in east Jerusalem or volunteers from the United Hatzalah group also rush to the scene to provide first aid until ambulances arrive.

Palestinian Ramzi Batesh, who works for United Hatzalah, said the rescue group established an east Jerusalem branch of the originally Jewish organisation because the time gap was leading to lives lost.

Responders in east Jerusalem are all Palestinians, except for Jewish volunteer Josh Wander.

He said he has had stones thrown at him as he raced to provide care while wearing his yarmulke skull cap, but that those in need are rarely concerned about his religion.

“I have never faced hostility from the people calling me,” Mr Wander said.

“I have only found appreciation from the people in need. [But] I have had issues in the past going into certain neighbourhoods and coming out of certain neighbourhoods.”

Violence since last October has killed 217 Palestinians and 34 Israelis, with Israeli authorities accusing most of the Palestinians killed of carrying out knife, gun or car-ramming attacks.

Palestinian medics say they are regularly prevented from reaching wounded people by Israeli soldiers, and witnesses have seen soldiers threatening medics.

A video that circulated last year showed Israeli forces firing pepper spray at Red Crescent medics during a dispute amid clashes in the West Bank.

Last year, an Israeli woman claimed that PRCS medics refused to treat members of her family after an attack near a settlement in the West Bank in which her husband and son died.

The Israeli government accused PRCS of failing to remain neutral, with wide Israeli media coverage condemning the medics.

However, an internal probe by the International Committee of the Red Cross later rejected those claims.

International medical organisations that work with Palestinians have also been accused of failing to remain neutral by campaigners. Several NGOs declined to be drawn into the debate for fear of being accused of anti-Israeli bias.

The representative of one international medical organisation said foreign medics and groups have to walk a fine line in terms of criticism in order to avoid losing access to those in need or face an Israeli backlash.

The source, who declined to be named, said groups opposed to Israel’s treatment of Palestinians face a “very difficult balancing act”.

* Agence France-Presse

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