In Syria, doctors say regime is hiding scores of coronavirus deaths

At one Damascus hospital, at least 50 patients have died, contradicting the government's official toll

epa08319353 A policeman wearing face mask walks in Damascus, Syria, 24 March 2020. Syrian government introduced measures to prevent the spread of the coronavirus after Syria announced the first case of covid19 on 21 March. Syria imposed a curfew from 6pm to 6am local time as of 24 March, suspended work in the ministries and its affiliated entities until further notice and closed markets and suspend all commercial, service, cultural and social activities.  EPA/YOUSSEF BADAWI
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Monday was a day like any other in Damascus.

Shops were open, the streets fully crowded with people, public transport working and military checkpoints blocked roads everywhere.

“People lost everything and faced death for the last nine years. Should we be scared of a virus?” asked Jumana, 38, a mother of three.

She was waiting in the line with dozens of people in front of a bakery. A massive lockdown appears difficult to set up in Syria after years of war.

“We don't have any infrastructure, people queue to buy food and gas, and there is more medicine on the black market than at a pharmacy,” Jumana said.

After weeks of denial, Syria has confirmed its first case of Covid-19.

She was a 20-year-old woman who had travelled to a foreign country, Health Minister Nizar Yazigi told the official Sana state news agency on Sunday.

Mr Yazigi said the number of cases had since risen to five.

The Damascus regime had claimed that Syria was spared from the virus, despite warnings and the obvious risks of a rapid spread.

But the figures are probably much higher, said a doctor in regime-held territory.

"Dr Haya", who works at Damascus Hospital, one of 22 hospitals working in the capital city, said she had to deal with many more cases.

“Many people had Covid-19 disease symptoms," she said in a worried voice.

"The hospitals are only able to deliver basic treatments, so I asked them to stay at home.

"We don't have medicines available. The only ones on the market come from Iran or India.

“We don't have a place for quarantined people. The government just started to build two dedicated buildings in Damascus.

"Many people die. Most of them are registered as victims of pneumonia. In my hospital alone, we had around 50 deaths."

 

After nine years of war, half a million deaths and 7 million people internally displaced, the population of Syria is particularly exposed.

In Idlib, Syria’s last opposition stronghold, 900,000 inhabitants survive in very precarious conditions.  No border crossing remains open with Turkey.

In the Syrian regime areas, the situation is not any better. Idlib and its countryside are completely isolated.

But after a ceasefire was declared by Russia and Turkey last month, calm reigns and bombings from all sides stopped.

Streets are crowded, markets are full and alive.

“I want to breathe,” says Mahmoud Taha, 40, who lives in Idlib city with his family.

“Life here is back to normal, unlike the whole world. We cannot be confined in our houses right after the bombing has stopped."

On Sunday, the Health Directorate and a few aid organisations started to prepare for an increase of Covid-19 cases.

A campaign of public awareness and disinfection was launched in schools, universities and mosques. Plastic tents were set up for 200 quarantined people beside the hospitals in Idlib.

Some mosques even called people to pray at home to avoid gatherings but former Al Qaeda affiliate Hayat Tahrir Al Sham, which is dominant in Idlib, arrested an imam for the call, witnesses said.

Mustafa Al Eid, assistant director of health for the rebel administration in the Idlib region, said a lack of equipment made it increasingly difficult to administer tests to detect the virus.

Syrian municipality workers disinfect the area around the Damascus'old market on March 24, 2020 as protective a measure against the spread of the coronavirus COVID-19.  / AFP / LOUAI BESHARA
Syrian municipality workers disinfect the area around the Damascus'old market on March 24, 2020 as protective a measure against the spread of the coronavirus Covid-19. AFP

O 18 hospitals working in the region, there is only one epidemiological device and it does not work at the moment, Mr Al Eid said.

Dr Ahmed, who works in an Idlib hospital, said: “Hundreds of civilians come with coronavirus symptoms but we don't know whether they are negative or positive.

"We advise patients to go home and quarantine themselves. We don’t even have oxygen."

A laboratory in Idlib started to perform tests on blood samples on Wednesday.

The fight against the global pandemic requires flawless organisation, good information and the population obeying instructions from the health authorities.

So many conditions to fight the coronavirus are impossible to meet in Syria.

Half a dozen political authorities share control of the territory, each applying its own rules and setting its own health standards.

They are the regime in Damascus and in areas it reconquered, rebels and extremists in the Idlib region, the Syrian Democratic Forces in the north-east, Turkey and its auxiliaries in the north-west,  Iranian militias, Russia, Lebanese Hezbollah, and the rest of the forces of the international coalition against ISIS.

Borders with Turkey and Iraq are closed but Damascus keeps its frontier with Lebanon open and flights continue to connect Damascus, Aleppo and Qamishli to foreign destinations.

Flights have been maintained with the holy Iranian city of Qom, the centre of the epidemic in Iran.

The country is very badly affected with at least 2,600 deaths but remains a strategic ally of the Damascus regime.

Pilgrims or Iranian militiamen who fight alongside loyalist forces may have brought the virus into Syria several weeks ago.

In the regions occupied by Turkey and its Syrian militias, Ankara has applied the same standards that it does on its own territory since March 20. People over the age of 65 have to stay at home.

Information brochures in Arabic on the coronavirus have been distributed to 500,000 Syrian households.

After days of hesitation, Turkey has closed its borders, deserted public places and suspended collective prayer.

In the areas controlled by Kurdish forces and their allies, in north-eastern Syria, a curfew was declared on Sunday.

Travel is no longer allowed between the cities and non-essential shops, cafes and restaurants were ordered to close on Monday.

Schools and public places had already been closed and all gatherings had been banned for several days.

“The virus is probably spreading very quickly throughout the area,” says a doctor from the town of Qamishli, which is shared by the Kurds and loyalist forces.

There are two cases at the city hospital run by the Assad regime but there are no means to test the population at large; even less to treat the weakest patients.

The Shebha hospital run by the Kurdish Red Crescent for the 200,000 displaced by the 2019 Turkish invasion of the Afrin region has only three respirators.

The Hassakeh hospital has about 150 respirators and will be the main place of confinement for patients in case of a sudden influx.

It is likely a matter of days before that influx arrives, says the doctor, asking the World Health Organisation to act quickly to prevent yet another disaster in Syria.