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Turkey-Syria earthquake: Mother and baby rescued twice in three days
ASyrian mother and her newborn baby are recovering after being rescued from the rubble of her earthquake-hit home twice in a week, a charity says.
Dima was seven months pregnant when last Monday’s earthquake caused part of her house in Jindayris to fall down.
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She suffered minor injuries and later gave birth to a boy, Adnan, at a hospital in Afrin supported by the Syrian American Medical Society (Sams).
They returned to the house, only for it to collapse fully three days later.
Adnan was brought back to Afrin’s al-Shifa Hospital by rescuers in a critical condition, suffering from severe dehydration and jaundice, while Dima was treated for a serious lower limb injury.
Dr Abdulkarim Hussein alIbrahim, a paediatrician, told the BBC via WhatsApp on Monday that the baby was responding well to treatment.
“Adnan’s condition... has significantly improved,” he said.
“We are just feeding him and [providing] the rest of his needs through intravenous drips.”
Video footage released by Sams showed Adnan sleeping peacefully inside an incubator with his wrist hooked up to a drip.
Dima and her husband Abdul Majid stand in their earthquakedestroyed home in Jindayris, Syria
Dima has been discharged from hospital once again and is living in a tent along with her husband, Abdul Majid, and their nine other children. She has been travelling to Afrin to visit Adnan in hospital every day.
Her family was forced to return to her partially destroyed home after she gave birth because there was no alternative shelter available in Jindayris, one of the worst-hit towns in oppositionheld north-western Syria.
They have also not received any other aid since the earthquake, like thousands of others who have been affected.
Even before the disaster, 4.1 million people - most of them women and children - were relying on humanitarian assistance to survive in the region, which is the last bastion of the jihadists and rebels who have been fighting forces loyal to President Bashar al-Assad for 12 years.
But as of Sunday, only 52 lorries carrying aid from UN agencies had arrived from Turkey via Bab al-Hawa in Idlib province - the sole border crossing that the UN is authorised to use to deliver humanitarian assistance.
The deliveries had been scheduled before the earthquake and were delayed by damaged roads and other logistical issues, which meant they have not included the heavy machinery and other specialist equipment needed by the White Helmets, whose first responders operate in opposition-held areas.
Dr Ibrahim said there was an acute shortage of the medicines, other medical supplies, beds and blankets needed to treat the many injured people still being pulled from the rubble.
“No hospital has the capacity to accommodate this large number of injuries,” he warned.
Sams said the lack of shelter and access to water, sanitation and hygiene was a major concern in earthquake-affected areas
“[Everywhere] is full.”
The chairman of the Sams Foundation, Dr Basel Termanini, said the lack of shelter and access to water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) services was also a major concern for the medical relief organisation, whose facilities in the region have helped more than 2,000 earthquake victims.
“We can treat the women after trauma or after delivery, but they need to go back to a safe environment with minimum housing, nutrition and clean water,” he told the BBC.
“Unfortunately, this is in general lacking in north-western Syria, due to limited resources and the markedly delayed aid coming from the only lifeline of Bab al-Hawa crossing.”
Dr Termanini accused the UN and the international community of being “quite guilty of poor planning and failed execution”.