Tripoli, 10 May 2019 – The World Health Organization today
condemned in the strongest terms an attack on an ambulance in Tripoli, Libya,
on Wednesday 8 May, that left 3 health workers injured, one severely.
“This attack on an ambulance with visible logos is a shocking
and intolerable violation of international humanitarian law,” said Dr Syed
Jaffar Hussain, WHO Representative in Libya. “Not only did this attack injure
key personnel, but the ambulance itself was taken away, thereby depriving
patients of future care.”
Since the conflict in Libya escalated in early April, 11
additional ambulances have been impacted or suffered collateral damage. In
April, 3 health workers were killed in Tripoli, and numerous first-line
responders have struggled to reach the wounded without being injured
themselves. As the conflict continues into its second month, more than 400
people have died and over 2000 have been wounded.
WHO has been supporting field hospitals and field ambulance teams in Libya since the beginning of the conflict. The Organization has also deployed emergency medical teams to key referral hospitals to perform surgeries in hospitals in and around Tripoli. WHO is also providing health facilities with medical supplies, including trauma kits with medicines for war injuries.
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“This flagrant breach of the basic rules of warfare could jeopardize the operations of field hospitals and ambulance teams, and deter dedicated health staff from performing their life-saving duties,” said Dr Ahmed Al-Mandhari, WHO’s Regional Director for the Eastern Mediterranean. “WHO cannot accept any actions that put health workers in harm’s way. Health staff in Libya are working to save lives and must be allowed to work without additional risk to their safety or well-being.”