2-month-old Syrian lost eye in regime attack

By Adham Kako, Esref Musa, Ahmad Wais, and Mehmet Burak Karacaoglu

IDLIB, Syria (AA) – Abdulrahman Jabi, a 2-month-old Syrian baby, lost his right eye in an attack by Assad regime forces and Iranian-back terror groups in Idlib, northwestern Syria.

On March 5, the Jabi family home was shelled by regime forces and allied groups a few days before a new cease-fire was announced in the province – the latest one, after repeated violations of previous cease-fires.

The baby, his eyes wide open due to the bombings, was seriously injured as a result of shrapnel hitting his right eye.

Abdulrahman was taken to Bab al-Hawa hospital near the Turkish border in hopes of saving his eye, but the damage was too severe.

Although the baby has gotten a prosthetic eye, this will not erase the sadness of his family or the feelings he will face as he grows up.

Speaking to Anadolu Agency, Zahir Jabi, the baby's father, said that they are homeless and sought help to find a place to take shelter.

The father of three shared his tragic life memories, saying he lost his mother in a similar attack on the same home in the town of al-Janoudiyah five years ago, in the thick of Syria’s decade-long civil war.

-Robbed of an eye

The grieving father described the incident that took his son’s eye, saying: "I went out to bring wood for the stove. Rockets started to fall. One of them hit our house. I opened the door and our home was full of dust and smoke. I asked my wife, 'Are you ok?' and she said 'I'm fine but Abdulrahman's head is bleeding'."

The father rushed to the nearest medical center, where they examined the baby and said he was not doing well, then transferred him to Bab Al-Hawa Hospital at the Turkish border.

"The results of X-rays showed that my baby was wounded in the head, there was bleeding and two cracks in the skull," he remembered.

He went on to say that doctors stopped the bleeding, but nothing could be done to heal the eye.

"The doctors asked me to sign a paper about removing my child's eyes,” he said. “On the first day I couldn’t bring myself to sign it. I didn’t know what to do with my sadness, but on the other hand, at least he’s still alive, thank God."

Jabi said that words could not express his sadness for his little baby, now sentenced to go through life with a single eye.

"I pray to Allah to bless him with a good life," he said.

"Five years ago, my 60-year-old mother and now my 2-month-old son were victims of the attacks. Neither of them committed any crime. These attacks must come to an end," Jabi added.

-Children suffer the most

Dr. Mahmut Kaddah, chief of medicine at the hospital which treated Abdurrahman, said: "The piece of shrapnel caused serious damage to his right eye. We couldn't save the baby's eye. Our ophthalmologists had to remove it.”

Stating that the baby is in good condition otherwise, Kaddah added: "Since the civil war began [in 2011], children are the group most exposed to the attacks. Many seriously injured children came from under debris to our hospital," he added.

The Idlib province, just south of Turkey’s border with Syria, had nominally been covered by cease-fires reached by Turkey and Russia – the Assad regime’s chief ally – since September 2018, and again this January, before the latest declared this March.

But the first two cease-fires were repeatedly violated by the Assad regime and its allies, killing and wounding thousands of innocent civilians, and sending upwards of a million towards the border with Turkey, seeking safe haven.

Turkey has long championed setting up a safe area in Idlib, and has pressed the European Union and the U.S. to help in this goal.

Last month, Turkey launched Operation Peace Spring in Idlib to protect civilians and Turkish troops guarding the cease-fire from Assad regime attacks.

*Writing by Mahmoud Barakat

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