Israeli troops in Al-shifa Hospital in Gaza.
By Rupa Marya and Vijay Prashad
On November 11, 2023, the Palestinian Red Crescent Society
(PRCS) stated that Israeli tanks were within twenty meters of the al-Quds
hospital, the second-largest hospital in Gaza City. They reported that there
was “direct shooting at the hospital, creating a state of extreme panic and
fear among 14,000 displaced people.” Many of those killed have been medical
personnel. A group called Healthcare Workers Watch-Palestine, formed in
November 2023, has been keeping a list of healthcare workers in Gaza killed by
Israeli attacks (226 are known to have been killed from October 7 till November
13).
The day before, the International Federation of Red Cross and
Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) reported that the PRCS is “caring for hundreds of
injured people and bed-ridden, long-term patients” at al-Quds. “Evacuating
patients, including those in intensive care, on life-support, and babies in
incubators, is close to, if not impossible in the current situation,” said the
IFRC. This and other hospitals as well as medical missions and medical workers
“are protected under international humanitarian law,” noted the IFRC. The legal
framework they referred to is straightforward:
1. Article 19 of the 1949 Geneva Conventions (Protection of
medical units and establishments). “Fixed establishments and mobile medical
units of the Medical Service may in no circumstances be attacked, but shall at
all times be respected and protected by the Parties to the conflict.”
2. Rule 25 of the International Humanitarian Law (Medical
Personnel). “Medical personnel exclusively assigned to medical duties must be
respected and protected in all circumstances.”
Two similar phrases in both the Article and the Rule stand
out: “in no circumstances” must the protection be withdrawn, and medical
workers must be protected “in all circumstances.” Humanitarian law applies to
all parts of the world and all conflicts. This is now established by the Treaty
of Rome (2002), which is the legal basis for the International Criminal Court.
The Treaty of Rome says that it is a war crime if an army is “intentionally
directing attacks against buildings,” including “hospitals and places where the
sick and wounded are collected.” There is one exception: “provided they are not
military objectives.” By claiming that the hospitals are above Hamas tunnels,
the Israelis are claiming that the entire medical infrastructure in Gaza is a
military target. This is a convenient way to skirt the absoluteness of
international humanitarian law.
In the coming days, we can expect the Israeli propaganda
machine to pump out images of IDF soldiers in the tunnels under decimated
hospitals holding up guns and copies of Mein Kampf to counter the horrific
real-time images of premature babies dying. While these are attempts to justify
murdering healthcare workers and the patients they were caring for, they won’t
hold up against International Humanitarian Law. Israel has a documented history
of bombing hospitals and other healthcare facilities in Gaza, and any doctor
versed in patient care quality and safety would insist that underground spaces
were constructed to conduct patient care far from the shrapnel of these air
strikes.
‘At All Costs’
Across the world on November 11, the American Medical
Association (AMA) held a meeting of its House of Delegates while these terrible
acts took place. When over 135 medical students and doctors in training in the
AMA tried to hold a discussion about a resolution that would call for a
ceasefire in Gaza, the AMA leadership shut them down. Those who supported the
effort said that there was a “coordinated effort at the national meeting to
shut the resolution down, with the Speaker not allowing delegates their
allotted 90 seconds to speak about the resolution.” The AMA said that this
resolution was “not relevant to advocacy.” “The AMA,” wrote the medical
personnel who framed the resolution, “has a responsibility to uphold the
wellbeing of healthcare workers and minimize human suffering, and it is clear
that these values are not being upheld by some of the most influential physicians
in the country, nor is the democratic process being respected.”
This stands in stark contrast to the AMA’s official position
on Ukraine in 2022, when they threw their institutional weight behind a call
for an immediate ceasefire and an end to Russian attacks on healthcare workers
and facilities, emphasizing that international humanitarian and human rights
laws must be and civilian and medical personnel lives must be protected “at all
costs.”
Every Life Is Sacred
A few days before the House of Delegates meeting, the
flagship journal of the AMA, the Journal of the AMA (JAMA), published an
article by Dr. Matthew Wynia from the Center for Bioethics and Humanities at
the University of Colorado and the co-chair of the AMA’s Taskforce on Truth,
Reconciliation, Healing, and Transformation. His article “Health Professionals
and War in the Middle East” makes three unimpeachable points:
– First, health professionals should condemn dehumanization
and acts of genocide.
– Second, health professionals should vigorously oppose both
antisemitism and anti-Muslim hatred.
– Third, health professionals have special responsibilities
to speak out against certain war crimes.
We concur with all three of these points, including the final
sentiment by Dr. Wynia: “In wartime, our profession must remain the living
embodiment of religious injunctions to treat every life as sacred, because to
save a single life is to save an entire world.”
Dr. Wynia’s article in JAMA, published a few
days before the AMA meeting, suggests that it would have been uncontroversial
for the AMA to pass a resolution asking for a ceasefire. After all, a ceasefire
would allow fellow medical workers to do their work without fear of
bombardment, it would stop the killing of civilians, and it would allow for
investigation into the attacks on medical facilities and medical workers. If
“every life is sacred,” then a medical body must join in the call to prevent
any further loss of innocent life. But this is not what happened at the AMA
meeting, whose refusal to open the floor for discussion about a ceasefire
resolution suggests the opposite approach.
A closer reading of Dr. Wynia’s article shows why medical
professionals decided not to allow even a discussion of a ceasefire in Gaza.
“Health professionals of goodwill and equally strong commitments to human
rights have differing questions on these questions, which reflects the nature
of the questions,” Dr. Wynia writes. Introducing moral relativism to the
discussion, Dr. Wynia allows for ambiguity where there is none—none in legal
terms and none in moral terms. How can “health professionals of goodwill” have
a disagreement about the targeting of medical workers and medical institutions
or indeed how can they disagree about the killing of civilians, including those
who are injured and sick in hospitals? There is room for debate over what must
be done when confronted by the evidence of attacks on medical workers and
medical workers, but there is no ambiguity about their illegality and
immorality.
Dying One by One
Israel has been spreading propaganda over the past several
weeks about the presence of Hamas headquarters under one of Gaza’s
hospitals—Al-Shifa—to inject a space of moral confusion around protecting
healthcare workers and healthcare facilities. On November 5, a group of almost
100 doctors in Israel circulated a letter calling for the annihilation of all
hospitals in Gaza, as if to sanction the IDF’s direct attack on the most sacred
spaces of our profession. On November 11, Israel also bombarded the Al-Shifa
Hospital complex with 1,700 sick and injured patients inside and about 50,000
displaced people sheltering in its courtyard according to Dr Ghassan Abu Sitta,
a surgeon who was stationed there at the time. Israeli attacks have completely
destroyed the hospital. With the power now out in Al-Shifa, 39 newborns in
incubators are now wrapped in blankets, dying one by one. Perhaps this is whom
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu referred to when he said the
“children of darkness.”
Israel’s attack on Gaza’s healthcare is an attack on the soul
of the medical profession, for which JAMA has provided cover and the AMA
supports through enforced silence. Why the American Medical Association can
make such a blunt statement about Ukraine but want to remain silent about
Palestine raises an important question: does the AMA advocate only for the
issues outlined by the U.S. State Department or are these the opinions of the
doctors who make up its membership?
Rupa Marya, MD, is a professor of medicine at the University
of California, San Francisco, co-founder of the Do No Harm Coalition, and
co-author with Raj Patel of Inflamed: Deep Medicine and the Anatomy of
Injustice.
Vijay Prashad is an Indian historian, editor, and journalist.
He is a writing fellow and chief correspondent at Globetrotter. 16
November 2023
Source: countercurrents.org