ICRC Bulletin
16 September 2011
Libya: supporting medical services in disputed areas
With the shift of the front lines to four disputed areas – in and around Bani Walid, Jufra, Sabha and Sirte – the ICRC is providing medical assistance. In the past week it visited hundreds of detainees and delivered aid to some 12,000 people in need.
In recent days the ICRC has delivered urgently
needed medical supplies for the treatment of up to 500
wounded people in or near Bani Walid, south-east of Tripoli,
and Jufra and Sabha, further south.
"We are concerned
about a further deterioration of the humanitarian situation
in these three areas as well as in and around Sirte. Heavy
fighting has already taken place and it could intensify,"
said Georges Comninos, the head of the ICRC delegation in
Tripoli. "We remind the parties to the conflict of their
obligation to take all possible precautions to protect
civilians, and health-care personnel and
facilities."
Medical assistance to Bani Walid
"Bani Walid's central hospital is not working at
all. Because of the fighting, the staff cannot reach the
hospital. Medical supplies can't either," said Detta
Gleeson, an ICRC health delegate.
"On 10 September, we
delivered surgical items for 100 patients and other medical
supplies to Tarhuna Hospital – the hospital closest to the
centre of Bani Walid that is still functioning – which had
already admitted casualties," said Ms Gleeson. "As soon as
possible, Tarhuna Hospital will send staff and the most
urgently needed medical supplies to the central hospital in
Bani Walid,
closer to incoming casualties."
In and around Sabha
On 11 September, at the request of
medical personnel on the ground, the ICRC delivered surgical
and other medical supplies to the field hospital in Brak,
some 80 kilometres north of Sabha, in a disputed area in the
south-west of Libya.
A few days earlier, ICRC staff had
assessed the humanitarian situation in Sabha, including the
capacity of medical facilities there to cope with a heavy
influx of casualties. Materials for the treatment of up to
100 war-wounded patients, 60 body bags and other supplies
were delivered to the hospital and two clinics in the town.
There were a few wounded patients, but despite a
shortage
of staff the hospital appeared to be able to cope.
"All
of the local authorities welcomed the ICRC during its brief
stay in Sabha," said Mr Comninos.
"But generally speaking
there is a lack of law and order in the area. Some
uncontrolled arms carriers have looted various places in and
around the town." This was the third ICRC mission to Sabha
since the beginning of the conflict.
Medical consignments
delivered by the ICRC include wound-dressing materials,
intravenous fluids and external fixators for fractured
limbs.
The ICRC also sent medical supplies to the
hospital in Hun. This town is situated south of Jufra, where
humanitarian needs could increase in the near future.
The ICRC is also continuing its efforts to maintain
contact with the authorities and with the Libyan Red
Crescent in Sirte with a view to providing assistance there.
Materials for the treatment of up to 200 war-wounded
patients are in Misrata, ready to be deployed to Sirte, as
are other supplies.
2,500 detainees in Tripoli
In
recent days the ICRC has continued to visit detainees,
including many sub-Saharan Africans as well as other foreign
nationals, in Tripoli. Over the past three weeks, the ICRC
has visited 10 places of detention in the city where around
2,500 people are held.
Some 350 detainees in Misrata and
300 detainees in Gharyan and two other places in the Nefusa
mountains have also been visited by the ICRC over the past
week.
During these visits, ICRC delegates assess the
conditions in which detainees are being held and the
treatment they receive. The ICRC shares its findings
bilaterally with the detaining authorities.
Assistance for almost 10,000 needy people in Tripoli
On 13
September, the ICRC distributed hygiene items to some 6,650
people in poor
neighbourhoods of Tripoli and to a further
2,650 needy people on the outskirts of the city. In
addition, it supplied diapers to mothers with infants. This
distribution was carried out in cooperation with the local
mosques and the Libyan Red Crescent.
"The people we assisted are mostly Libyans who rely on social welfare," said Mr Comninos.
"Because of a lack of liquidity in the banks, they have not been able to receive any income. That'swhy we are stepping in to ease their situation in these difficult times."
1,300 people displaced in the desert
Hundreds of families, mainly from Ben Jawad and
other towns along the Mediterranean coast west of Ras Lanuf,
have fled their homes because of the tensions and fighting
in the area. For more than two weeks they have been living
in tents in the desert, some 150 kilometres south of the
coastal town of Nawfaliya. ICRC staff recently assessed
their situation and delivered aid.
"The living conditions
of these families are difficult and the desert climate is
harsh. It's especially hard for the kids and babies," said
Ghafar Bishtawi, an ICRC delegate. "They have no
electricity, their food and water are mixed with sand and
their tents are easily blown away by the wind."
Together
with Libyan Red Crescent volunteers the ICRC has distributed
food and hygiene items to over 1,300 people displaced in the
desert. Those who asked to call their families were given
the opportunity to do so. Many had had no contact at all
with their loved ones since the beginning of the
conflict.
"Like many others in different parts of Libya, these people said they feared to go back home," added Mr Bishtawi. "It is crucial that civilians be protected by all parties, at all times, without any kind of discrimination. They mustn't be prevented from going back home. We are raising this issue with the authorities concerned and with community leaders."
Only a few families have returned to Ben Jawad. The hospital there is not functioning.
This week the ICRC and Libyan Red Crescent also started to distribute food and hygiene items to 1,100 people in Ras Lanuf. Most of the people receiving the aid had stayed in the town during the fighting or had just returned home, but some had been displaced from Brega, Ben Jawad or Nawfaliya.
ENDS