Gazans mourn baby who dies after rescue from dead mother’s womb

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Under a ceaseless storm of strikes in Gaza, the baby girl has survived insurmountable odds as the only member of her family left alive after she was delivered by Caesarian section from her dying mother’s womb. (AFP)
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A medic cares for ‘Sabreen Al-Ruh Al-Sheikh’, a baby delivered preterm by caesarian section minutes before the death of her mother, gravely injured in an Israeli air strike, at the Emirati hospital in Rafah on Apr. 24, 2024. (AFP)
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A person holds a picture of Sabreen Al-Rouh, a Palestinian baby girl, who died a few days after she was saved from the womb of her dying mother Sabreen Al-Sheikh (al-Sakani), killed in an Israeli strike along with her husband Shokri and her daughter Malak in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip, April 26, 2024. (REUTERS)
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Updated 27 April 2024
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Gazans mourn baby who dies after rescue from dead mother’s womb

  • Doctors were able to save the baby, delivering her by Caesarean section
  • Her mother, 30 weeks pregnant, was seriously injured when an Israeli strike hit the family home in Rafah on Saturday night

RAFAH, Gaza Strip: Relatives gathered by a tiny sandy grave in Gaza on Friday, where they had buried a baby girl who lived just a few days after doctors delivered her from the womb of her dying mother following an Israeli airstrike.

The baby was named Sabreen Al-Ruh after her dead mother, and Rouh means “soul.”
Her mother, Sabreen Al-Sakani Al-Sheikh, 30 weeks pregnant, was seriously injured when the Israeli strike hit the family home in Rafah, the southernmost city in the besieged Gaza Strip, on Saturday night.




Sabreen Al-Ruh’s uncle, Rami Al-Sheikh Jouda, sat by her grave on Friday, lamenting the loss of the infant and the others in the family. (Reuters)

The baby’s father Shukri and three-year-old sister Malak were killed.
Doctors delivered the baby by Caesarean section, but the mother died of her wounds.
Dr. Mohammed Salama, head of the emergency neonatal unit at Emirati Hospital, who had been caring for the baby, said the infant suffered respiratory problems and a weak immune system, and died on Thursday.
“I and other doctors tried to save her, but she died. For me personally, it was a very difficult and painful day,” he said.
“She was born while her respiratory system was not mature, and her immune system was very weak and that is what led to her death. She joined her family as a martyr,” Salama said.
“Maybe if it weren’t for the Israeli war on Gaza and the devastation of hospitals, we would have been able to help more children survive. But hospitals were damaged and others destroyed and our capabilities have become much limited.”
More than 34,000 Palestinians, most of them women and children, have been confirmed killed in the six-month-old war in Gaza between Israel and Hamas, according to the Gaza Health Ministry. Israel denies deliberately targeting civilians in its campaign to eradicate Hamas.
Much of Gaza has been laid to waste by Israeli bombardments, and most of the enclave’s hospitals have been badly damaged, while those still operating are short of electricity, medicine sterilization equipment, and other supplies.
The baby’s grandmother had pleaded for the doctors to save her, to “keep the memory of her mother, father, and sister alive, but it was God’s will that she died,” Salama said.
Her uncle, Rami Al-Sheikh Jouda, sat by her grave on Friday, lamenting the loss of the infant and the others in the family.
He said he had visited the hospital every day to check on the baby’s health. Doctors told him she had a respiratory problem but he did not think it was bad until he got a call from the hospital telling him the baby had died.
“Rouh is gone, my brother, his wife and daughter are gone, his brother-in-law and the house that used to bring us together are gone,” he told Reuters.
“We are left with no memories of my brother, his daughter, or his wife. Everything was gone, even their pictures, their mobile phones, we couldn’t find them,” the uncle said.

 


Ambassadors, military attaches visit border villages, are briefed on weapons centralization south of Litani River

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Ambassadors, military attaches visit border villages, are briefed on weapons centralization south of Litani River

  • Aoun: Contacts ongoing at home and abroad to consolidate security in southern Lebanon

BEIRUT: A delegation of Arab and foreign ambassadors and military attaches toured areas south of the Litani River on Monday, accompanied by Lebanese Army Chief Gen. Rodolphe Haykal, for a briefing on the progress in implementing the plan to confine weapons to the state.

According to a military source, the visit aimed to “review the tasks being carried out by the Lebanese Army to implement the Homeland Shield Plan mandated by the Council of Ministers.”

The first phase of the plan is scheduled to conclude by the end of this month, after which the army will move to the next stage: centralizing all weapons north of the Litani line.

Diplomats are expected to convey their field observations to their respective governments on the eve of a US–Saudi–French meeting with the army commander on Dec. 17 and 18 in Paris, where they will also discuss supporting the Lebanese Army, the weapons centralization plan, and the progress achieved.

The commander of the southern Litani sector, Brig. Gen. Nicolas Thabet, briefed the diplomatic delegation on the operations being carried out by the army during a meeting held at the Benoit Barakat Barracks in Tyre, which was joined by the army commander and senior officers. The delegation then moved on to inspect the western sector.

Haykal stressed “the importance of supporting the army and the commitment of all parties to the ceasefire agreement and respect for Lebanese territorial sovereignty.”

While Thabet presented an operational overview to the ambassadors, diplomats focused on evaluating the first phase of the weapons centralization plan, the mechanisms for transitioning to the second phase, and the obstacles facing the army.

The diplomats inspected several army positions deployed along the forward edge, including the town of Aita Al-Shaab and the Wadi Zibqin area, where a Hezbollah facility had previously been located.

A week earlier, Thabet had disclosed that “during the execution of its mission south of the Litani, the army has dealt with 177 tunnels since the launch of the Homeland Shield Plan, closed 11 crossings along the Litani River, and seized 566 rocket launchers.”

Monday’s tour coincided with a meeting on the other side of the border between US Envoy Thomas Barrack and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Tel Aviv, focused on de-escalating tensions with Lebanon and Syria.

On Monday, Israel continued through its media to promote the prospect of an imminent Israeli military escalation against Hezbollah unless it is disarmed by the end of the year.

According to the Lebanese Army, “the recent Israeli strikes targeted civilian homes. The army inspected them after they were hit and found no evidence that they contained any weapons.”

Army command further clarified that “after the Israeli enemy threatened two days ago to bomb homes, the Lebanese Army conveyed a message to the relevant mechanism expressing its readiness to inspect the houses before any strike to determine whether they contained weapons or ammunition.”

However, Israeli forces allegedly rejected the proposal and went ahead with air raids on the homes, destroying them.

For his part, President Joseph Aoun said on Monday before visitors that “contacts are ongoing domestically and internationally to consolidate security and stability in the south through negotiations via the mechanism committee, which will hold a meeting next Friday.”

He added that the mechanism’s work “enjoys Lebanese, Arab, and international support, particularly following the appointment of former Ambassador Simon Karam as head of the Lebanese delegation.”

Aoun noted that “the choice of negotiation is the alternative to war, which would yield no results but would cause further harm and destruction to Lebanon and the Lebanese without exception.”