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Syrian activists operate secret hospitals to treat wounded dissidents

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PBS Frontline reporter Ramita Navai meets four soldiers on the run at a secret location deep in the Syrian countryside. The soldiers say they deserted the Army because they were forced to shoot at protesters. (Photo courtesy of PBS Frontline.)

After a violent crackdown against Arab Spring protesters in Syria, the government is using its hospitals to find and isolate dissidents. To get the treatment they need, they're having to go to independent, underground, make-shift hospitals.

Story from The World. Visit TheWorld.org to hear a complete report.

Foreign media aren't allowed into Syria to report on the protests and demonstrations going on there.

But news is trickling out slowly as western journalists sneak into the country, report for days or weeks at a time and then sneak back out to publish the details about what they've learned.

Reporter Ramita Navai snuck into Syria and spent more than two weeks there posing as a tourist, but secretly interviewing and documenting the actual conditions and violence.

"In a location on the outskirts of Damascus, we met an opposition doctor," Navai said. "He spends every night treating the wounded."

And he's not doing it at local hospitals, because government militia are raiding the hospitals and shutting out anyone whom they believe has been a protester, Navai found.

Instead, a network of secret, make-shift hospitals have been established around the country.

"We got access via the activists who we were effectively embedded with," Navai said. "It was really quite an operation just getting us to these secret hospitals."

She described the hospitals as almost surreal. Virtually every patient is suffering from a gunshot wound. Many of them are children. The sterillizing solution they use is stored in cut out Coke bottles.

What equipment they do have, they share with other hospitals. It's stored at a warehouse, away from the patients and hospitals, so that if there is a raid, the equipment is more likely to survive and a new hospital can be set up.

"Within 10 minutes, they can get operating tables, heart monitors to makeshift rooms that operate as operating theatres or to the secret hospitals themselves," Navai said.

Navai said she met one patient who had actually been taken to a traditional hospital. The state militia, however, raided the hospital and if not for the quick thinking of a sympathetic doctor, the man likely would have found himself seized by the militia or killed on the spot. Protesters say the militia often kidnap the injured, torture them, kill them and then return the bodies to family members a week later.

Instead, the doctor told militia that the patient had died and wheeled him to the morgue. There, he was taken straight to a secret hospital for treatment.

"There are few doctors who were willing to risk their lives to help injured protesters, because it's so dangerous," Navai said.

One doctor told Navai he himself knew of 10 doctors who had been imprisoned for treating protesters.

Syrian officials have denied all allegations of mistreating protesters, though Amnesty International released a 39-page report documenting just this type of abuse.

For more on this, check out Navai's documentary on PBS Frontline, set to air on Nov. 8.

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PRI's "The World" is a one-hour, weekday radio news magazine offering a mix of news, features, interviews, and music from around the globe. "The World" is a co-production of the BBC World Service, PRI and WGBH Boston. More about The World.

Found in:   health & medicine   protest   Syria   Arab Spring
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Subscribe to comments feed Comments (7 posted)

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Elizabeth Edgerton 23 March, 2012 12:20:27
I am curious to see if Joan Bennett, your radio news
reporter, is related to Joan Bennett the actress I saw
years ago in movies and on TV. I believe that ABCs
Ms Bennett has a voice similar to the actress voice.
I tried to find her e-mail address but there were waaay
too many sites for my trying to find the correct one.
I would appreciate your answering my query. Thank
you.
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18 September, 2012 05:12:29
Often people are ignorant. Im supprised that person reads the news honestly what has this world come too. Thank you america!!!
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12 April, 2012 12:20:16
to the above comment:
injured protesters are being tortured, killed and returned to their families and you are curious about Joan f#@$ing Bennett?!
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Norberto morales 17 August, 2012 09:15:05
O la como estan
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Steve Danson 23 September, 2012 04:44:00
Why do they refer to the wounded in this article as "protesters"? They are fighters and killers. This is a civil war, not a demonstration.

When we had our civil war, did we call the Confederate Army "protesters"? I think not.

Several hundred thousand civilians have fled, and are refered to as "refugees". Anyone whom remains is a fighter.
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William moraza 23 September, 2012 07:34:55
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molly 17 February, 2013 08:18:55
Why are you not covering the demonstration in Washington DC
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