GENEVA,
April 8 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) - Baghdad hospitals are
bursting at the seams as they are critically running low on medical
supplies to cope with the wounded from heavy fighting inside the Iraqi
capital, international aid agencies warned Tuesday, April 8.
"They
have reached the limit of their capacity," Nada Doumani, a
spokeswoman for the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC)
said.
Doumani
told a press briefing by aid agencies that Iraqi surgeons and medical
staff were working round the clock and running low on medicines and
surgical equipment including anaesthetics, reported Agence France-Presse
(AFP).
"When
this conflict started we all said there were sufficient supplies in
Baghdad for several weeks at least of normal medical operations,"
said Iain Simpson, a spokesman for the World Health Organisation (WHO).
"This
is not a normal medical situation and so supplies are running very low,
particularly emergency supplies," he added.
ICRC
was delivering limited emergency stocks in the Iraqi capital, while the
WHO said it was trying to gain access for a convoy of trucks from Jordan
which was waiting with medical supplies for hospitals in Baghdad.
Power
cuts were also hampering work in hospitals and affecting water supplies,
which were only being shored up with emergency generators.
"These
are very temporary, emergency solutions," Doumani said.
"The
situation in Baghdad is starting to become critical especially with the
power cuts," she added.
The
U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said in
a briefing note that the Al-Yarmuk hospital in Baghdad was coping with
about 100 wounded an hour.
Another
hospital, Mahmudiya, south of Baghdad, was no longer capable of dealing
with war wounded, it added.
The
aid agencies were not prepared to give an overall estimate of
casualties.
"The
key is that there is a large volume of civilian casualties,"
Simpson said.
ICRC
officials also reiterated warnings about water shortages throughout
central and southern Iraq, which are beginning to have a sharp impact on
children.
The
Swiss-based humanitarian aid agency said Tuesday that a water
purification station in northern Baghdad was hit overnight by a U.S.
missile, putting at risk water supply to a major suburb.
"With
the Qanat station out of operation, Saddam City risks being deprived of
water," ICRC spokesman in Baghdad told AFP.
"What
we had believed would be a bad scenario is happening, there are more and
more children suffering from diarrhoea because of the lack of water,
they drink contaminated water," Damien Personnaz, a spokesman for
the U.N. Children's Fund (UNICEF) said.
There
were no reports of cholera, but there was a "high potential for
outbreaks," Simpson noted.