What courage looks like

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Unarmed and facing Israeli tanks amid devastation next to his hospital, one Palestinian doctor shows the world what courage looks like.

It is a photo that will come to symbolise the sheer enormity of Israel’s assault on healthcare in Gaza and its attempt to empty the north of Gaza of Palestinians altogether. It is ethnic cleansing and it is deliberate policy. It’s not even secret. It is called “The Generals’ Plan”.

The doctor in the photo is Dr Hussam Abu Safiya, director of the Kamal Adwan hospital – the last hospital in the north that was still at least partly functioning last week. Since then, Israeli forces have closed Kamal Adwan down, forcing staff and patients out of the hospital – including those being treated for severe injuries. Five medical staff were reported killed in an Israeli strike last Thursday. Many more hospital staff have now been taken into detention. They include Dr Abu Safiya himself. As I write this, his whereabouts remain unknown.

This video graphically illustrates the reality of how Israel is systematically destroying healthcare in Gaza. Please don’t look away.

If you had said five years ago that world leaders would allow a state – any state – to attack hospitals on a daily basis with impunity and utterly destroy civilians’ access to urgent medical treatment, few people would have believed you. But that is what is happening. Indeed, the USA is still enabling the death and destruction to take place with the supply of multi-million dollars-worth of weapons. Other countries are also complicit. Despite having suspended licences for some arms exports to Israel in early autumn, UK-made components for F35 jets are still being supplied to the US with the knowledge that those components will find their way into the very aircraft that are devastating Gaza.

When will world leaders show even a fraction of the courage shown by Dr Hussam Abu Safiya when he stood alone in front of advancing Israeli tanks?

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Richard Burden

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I was Labour Member of Parliament for Birmingham Northfield between 1992 and 2019 and a former Shadow Transport Minister. I now chair Healthwatch in Birmingham and Solihull, and the West Midlands Board of Remembering Srebrenica. I also work as a public affairs consultant. I am an effective community advocate and stakeholder alliance builder with a passion for human rights. I am a trustee of the Balfour Project charity and of Citizens Advice Birmingham, and a former Chair of Medical Aid for Palestinians.

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