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How doctors in diaspora are helping resuscitate Syria’s broken health system

Special How doctors in diaspora are helping resuscitate Syria’s broken health system
Medics give cholera vaccination to children in the town of Maaret Misrin in the rebel-held northern part Idlib province in Syria on March 7, 2023. (AFP/file)
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Updated 06 March 2025

How doctors in diaspora are helping resuscitate Syria’s broken health system

How doctors in diaspora are helping resuscitate Syria’s broken health system
  • Shortages of food and medicine are compounding Syria’s suffering as the nation marks its first Ramadan since the fall of Assad
  • Aid agencies are working to prop up the country’s shattered infrastructure, as the health system creaks under ongoing US sanctions

LONDON: Brought to the brink of collapse by more than a decade of civil war, fragmentation, sanctions, and the displacement of countless medical professionals, the Syrian Arab Republic’s health system is on life support.

With the fall of the Bashar Assad regime in December and the rise of a fledgling transitional authority, Syria now faces the daunting task of rebuilding a unified and resilient health sector from amid the ruins.

Data from the World Health Organization shows that just 57 percent of Syria’s hospitals and 37 percent of its primary health centers are fully operational. However, even these suffer severe shortages, leaving millions unable to access basic services.

“Hospitals are outdated, primary health care centers lack essential services, technology is obsolete, and there is no health insurance, funding, or digitization,” Dr. Zaher Sahloul, head of the US-based medical charity MedGlobal, told Arab News.

“The Ministry of Health is tasked with resuscitating the healthcare system with a very limited capacity and a small cadre of health administrators. The whole healthcare system needs to be rebuilt.”

A senior Syrian health official recently told the Iraq-based Shafaq News that interim authorities have devised “a short-term emergency plan spanning three to six months, prioritizing fuel, electricity, and vital medical supplies.

Zuhair Qarat, director of planning and international cooperation at Syria’s Ministry of Health, said the country is experiencing critical shortages of essential medical supplies, fuel, and even food for patients and staff.

To pave the way for recovery, local nongovernmental organizations and international aid groups have launched their own initiatives, like MedGlobal’s “Rebuilding Syria” campaign, to help address these shortages.




MedGlobal, a US-based medical charity, has launched the “Rebuilding Syria” campaign to help address shortages in health care services. (Photo courtesy of MedGlobal)

Their efforts come as Muslims in Syria observe their first Ramadan since the fall of the regime. Food shortages during the fasting month have only intensified the suffering and highlighted the need for additional aid.

A recent report by the World Food Programme found that more than half of Syria’s population — 12.9 million people — are food insecure, with about 3 million facing acute hunger. Malnutrition, especially in children, weakens the immune system and can lead to a range of health problems.

MedGlobal’s Sahloul said that although Syrian doctors “are very capable, working against all odds,” the average salary for a doctor is just $25 a month — barely enough to cover three days of food and transportation.

“The needs are immense, while the funding is limited, especially with the persistence of sanctions,” he said.




About 3 million Syrians are facing acute hunger, and children are the most vulnerable, according to arecent report by the World Food Programme. (Photo courtesy of MedGlobal)

Coinciding with the Muslim holy month, MedGlobal has launched a special appeal for donations.

“⁠In Ramadan, we are ramping up our fundraising campaign for the many programs we are offering, especially lifesaving dialysis services, medications for poor patients with chronic diseases, and supporting lifesaving heart procedures to patients with cardiac disease in public hospitals,” said Sahloul.

“We also started a new program to provide meals to patients and medical staff in two public hospitals in Homs.”

MedGlobal has been working to address medical supply shortages by ramping up its in-kind donation programs to Syrian hospitals.

“We recently sent a shipment of medical supplies worth $20 million, to be distributed to hospitals in coordination with the Ministry of Health,” said Sahloul.




Workers unload medical and health supplies to Syria, delivered by the World Health Organization at the Istanbul International Airport in Turkiye on December 26, 2024. (AFP)

In addition to donations, MedGlobal and its partners are engaging Syrian expatriates in postwar recovery. One key effort is REViVE, launched by Syrian experts in global health, healthcare administration, public health, economics, informatics, and mental health.

Another initiative, the Homs Healthcare Recovery, also known as Taafi Homs, employs 625 Syrian doctors in the diaspora to develop a plan to support public hospitals.

“Through the initiative, we activated the only cardiac catheterization center in Homs at Al-Walid Hospital, launched a mental health program to support victims of torture and freed prisoners, and provided training to recent psychiatry graduates in coordination with the University of Illinois at Chicago,” said Sahloul.

IN NUMBERS

14.9 million Syrians in need of healthcare services. * $56.4m

$56.4 million Funds required to address health needs.

(Source: WHO)

“We also procured critical medical equipment, including an eye echo machine for the city’s only public eye hospital and a neurosurgical microscope for the university hospital. Additionally, we delivered 1,000 life-saving dialysis kits to three hospitals and dialysis centers.

“Similar initiatives have begun in Deir ez-Zor and rural Damascus.”

And while these initiatives are providing Syrians with much-needed health services, Sahloul stressed that the full collaboration of the new health authorities remains key to their success.

Although the fall of the Assad regime has opened a path for the health sector’s recovery, significant challenges remain. These include the absence of a state-led transition strategy, the continued brain drain of health professionals, and US sanctions.




In this picture taken on May 2, 2023, female patients receive treatment at the Hematology and Oncology department run by the Syrian American Medical Society (SAMS) at Idlib Central Hospital in the rebel-held northwestern Syrian city. (AFP/file)

“At this early stage, the focus is only on immediate and urgent needs and stopping the bleeding,” Sahloul said. “This is necessary but is not enough.

“A new strategy must be drafted to address health governance, human resources, health information systems, training, and education. It should place the Ministry of Health and related ministries at the center, supported by local and international NGOs, as well as UN agencies.

“There should be greater coordination and collaboration between the Ministry of Health, NGOs, and UN agencies. This is not happening at present for many reasons.”




In this picture taken on May 2, 2023, Rabie, a teenage cancer patient, speaks with his physician oncologist Abdel-Razek Bakkour as he lies in a bed at the Hematology and Oncology department run by the Syrian American Medical Society (SAMS) at Idlib Central Hospital in Syria. (AFP/file)

Failing to develop a clear strategy amid ongoing shortages of basic services and limited resources “will further cripple the healthcare system, drive more brain drain, worsen healthcare outcomes more than the war’s impact, and allow disease outbreaks,” he added.

Sahloul also stressed the “urgent need” to lift “crippling” US sanctions, which had been imposed on the Assad regime but continue to weigh on the new government, to achieve a full recovery for the medical sector.

“Humanitarian and emergency aid won’t be enough,” he said.

In addition to destroyed infrastructure, funding shortfalls, and supply shortages, the exodus of medical professionals has devastated Syria’s health system.




Girls sits near damaged buildings in the devastated Hajar al-Aswad area near the Yarmuk camp for Palestinian refugees on the southern outskirts of Damascus on December 23, 2024. (AFP)

The conflict, which began in 2011 following Assad’s brutal crackdown on anti-government protests, led to a loss of more than 70 percent of Syria’s health workforce. By 2021, the International Rescue Committee said there was just one doctor for every 10,000 people.

“The resourceful Syrian diaspora should be embraced and allowed to help,” said Sahloul, noting that “there are more than 12,000 Syrian-American doctors and a similar number in Germany.”

Syrians now make up the largest group of foreign doctors in Germany, The Associated Press reported in December. German officials have even said Syrian physicians are “indispensable” to the nation’s health system.

Sahloul said stopping the brain drain must be the top priority. “Every young doctor or new graduate I met in Syria is thinking of leaving,” he said. “This is not good for the future of the country and its health.”




Members of the Syrian community rally in Berlin, Germany, on Dec. 8, 2024, to celebrate the end of Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad's rule. The Syrian war has resulted in an acute shortage of health workers in the country. (AFP/File)

However, he added, “retention of healthcare workers requires improving compensation first and foremost, improving training and education, updating technology, and updating hospitals.”

In the meantime, NGOs are finding ways to leverage Syrian expatriates to aid the recovery. “Attracting Syrian specialists back is a challenge, but there are always creative solutions,” said Sahloul.

“Syrian expatriate physicians volunteering within MedGlobal and other diaspora NGOs are ready to contribute to medical and surgical missions, as well as tele-health, tele-psych, and online education and training — initiatives we’ve implemented across various regions over the past 14 years.”




Syria's yearslong war has resulted in an acute shortage in health care manpower. (Photo courtesy of MedGlobal)

Meanwhile, Syria faces multiple public health crises, including the rise of multidrug-resistant bacteria due to unchecked antibiotic use and limited lab testing.

Sahloul said a mental health crisis is also unfolding. This has been fueled by torture survivors, the families of the forcibly disappeared, victims of violence and displacement, returning refugees, and drug addiction linked to the production of the amphetamine-type stimulant captagon.

“There are very limited resources to manage the mental health crisis and festering drug addiction,” he said.




A man walks through a destroyed neonatal care ward at a hospital that was hit by a reported air strike in the Syrian village of Shinan, Idlib, on November 6, 2019. (AFP File)

Syria also faces an epidemic of noncommunicable diseases, including heart disease, diabetes, hypertension, obesity, chronic kidney disease, cancer, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.

“Many patients cannot afford their medications — a problem compounded by one of the highest smoking rates in the world,” said Sahloul.

Although Assad’s portraits have been removed from hospitals in areas once under his regime’s control, anything beyond this surface level change remains unlikely without the lifting of US sanctions and a clear recovery strategy.

For now, Syria’s doctors will continue to fight an uphill battle, struggling to keep the lights on amid ongoing electricity and fuel shortages, and keeping themselves and their patients fed, let alone provide lifesaving care.


Morocco’s quake survivors demand more help as World Cup spending ramps up

Updated 13 sec ago

Morocco’s quake survivors demand more help as World Cup spending ramps up

Morocco’s quake survivors demand more help as World Cup spending ramps up
AZGOUR: As rains swept into Morocco’s Atlas Mountains earlier this month, 72-year-old Lahcen Abarda rushed to reinforce the plastic sheeting of the tent where he has lived for the past two years.
Abarda, a victim of the 2023 earthquake that killed nearly 3,000 people, says he has already had to repair his tent from sun and wind damage as he still waits for promised aid to build a new house.
“I have been living in plastic tents since my home was destroyed,” said Abarda, a subsistence farmer, who shares the tent with his two daughters. “Whenever I ask, they say you will benefit later.”

INVESTMENTS IN STADIUMS FOR THE 2030 WORLD CUP
Two years on from Morocco’s 6.8-magnitude quake, the pace of recovery efforts has frustrated many victims, and critics point to a contrast to the country’s fast-paced investments in stadiums and infrastructure projects ahead of the African Cup of Nations in December and the 2030 World Cup.
Last week, on the second anniversary of the quake, dozens of survivors staged a protest in front of Morocco’s parliament in Rabat, calling on the government to take reconstruction aid as seriously as World Cup projects.
They held banners with the names of villages destroyed by the earthquake and chanted slogans including, “Quake money, where did it go? To festivals and stadiums.”
“We are happy to see large stadiums, theaters and highways in Morocco. But there is also a marginalized and forgotten Morocco that needs political will,” said Montasir Itri, a leader in the group supporting quake survivors.
The government has spent 4.6 billion Moroccan dirhams ($510 million) on housing aid for quake victims as of September, offering 140,000 dirhams (about $15,500) in aid for totally destroyed homes and 80,000 for partially damaged ones.
By comparison, it has allocated more than 20 billion dirhams to prepare stadiums for global tournaments.
Overall, sentiment in Morocco is broadly positive around the World Cup preparations, which authorities say will boost the country’s profile and bring economic growth and new jobs.
Moroccan officials deny prioritising World Cup spending over quake recovery efforts, and Prime Minister Aziz Akhannouch has praised the pace of reconstruction.
“There are not many tents left,” Akhannouch told state TV, promising to address remaining cases individually.

’TWO-SPEED’ MOROCCO
Dismantled tents line the road to the Atlas village of Sellamte, which was hit hard by the quake. Many of the tents’ one-time residents have moved into concrete houses built with reconstruction aid.
According to government data, out of 59,675 homes damaged in the quake, 51,154 homes have been rebuilt. Local authorities in Al Haouz said only 4 percent of homes have yet to begin construction. They also said all tents had been dismantled.
But Itri’s group disputes these figures, saying many survivors are still living in tents and even for those who have secured new housing, aid has not been enough.
Construction worker Mohamed Ait Batt told Reuters he received only 80,000 dirhams to restore his partially demolished house. But then he was told to relocate to an area near the village without receiving enough aid.
“We were planning a wedding for my son, but the money we received wasn’t enough to build. We used all his savings, and we still have more to do,” he said, inside the unfinished home he shares with his wife and daughter
About an hour’s drive away, in the village of Anerni, new one-floor brick homes with uniform facades have replaced the diversity of traditional mud, stone and wood houses unique to the Amazigh-speaking Atlas people. Beside them stand rows of makeshift tin shelters.
Inside one, Aicha Ait Addi sat on a plastic mat and poured tea.
“My house was fully destroyed. When I complain, they tell me I wasn’t living here. But I have a home here. Do they want me to abandon my village?” she said.
Morocco, where some cities enjoy European-like living standards, has reduced poverty rates from 11.9 percent in 2014 to 6.8 percent in 2024.
Yet its rural areas still show above-average poverty, according to the national statistics agency. King Mohammed VI, who sets Morocco’s policy direction, has acknowledged the divide.
“It is not acceptable for Morocco – today or at any time in the future – to be a two-speed country,” he said in a July speech, urging reforms to address rural poverty.

Lebanon says busts international drug network, seizes hashish, captagon

Lebanon says busts international drug network, seizes hashish, captagon
Updated 15 min 55 sec ago

Lebanon says busts international drug network, seizes hashish, captagon

Lebanon says busts international drug network, seizes hashish, captagon
  • Lebanon has faced pressure from Gulf states to counter the production and trafficking of drugs, particularly the amphetamine-like narcotic captagon, for which the conservative monarchies are a major market

BEIRUT: Lebanese Interior Minister Ahmad Al-Hajjar said Monday that authorities dismantled a network that was preparing to smuggle hashish and the illicit stimulant captagon to ֱ.
Lebanon has faced pressure from Gulf states to counter the production and trafficking of drugs, particularly the amphetamine-like narcotic captagon, for which the conservative monarchies are a major market.
Hajjar said authorities dismantled the network, which mainly sought to smuggle captagon and hashish, and arrested its head and a number of other people.
“This network had foreign links, with people in Turkiye, people in Australia” and was preparing to connect with operatives in Jordan, he said.
Lebanese authorities “seized 6.5 million captagon pills and 720 kilograms (1,500 pounds) of hashish which were being prepared... for shipment toward the Kingdom of ֱ,” Hajjar said.
The operation was thwarted before it reached Beirut port for shipment, he said, adding that fighting the drug trade “is one of the main priorities” of the Lebanese state.
Last week, Hajjar said authorities had seized some eight million captagon pills worth more than $90 million from a warehouse in northern Lebanon and arrested several suspects.
Captagon became neighboring Syria’s largest export following the eruption of the civil war in 2011, and a key source of illicit funding for former president Bashar Assad’s government.
In Lebanon, Assad’s ally Hezbollah faced accusations of using the captagon trade for financing.
The drug has flooded the region, with neighboring countries occasionally announcing captagon seizures and asking Lebanon and Syria to ramp up efforts to combat the trade.


UN rights council to debate Israel attack on Qatar Tuesday

UN rights council to debate Israel attack on Qatar Tuesday
Updated 54 min 27 sec ago

UN rights council to debate Israel attack on Qatar Tuesday

UN rights council to debate Israel attack on Qatar Tuesday
  • Israel attack's attack was widely condemned across the Arab and Islamic world as a violation of Qatar’s sovereignty and international law

GENEVA: The United Nations Human Rights Council said it will host an urgent debate Tuesday on Israel’s airstrike targeting Hamas leaders in Qatar.
The council said Monday the debate would “discuss the recent military aggression carried out by the State of Israel against the State of Qatar on 9 September 2025’.”

Israel attacked Qatar on Sept. 9 targeted the residences of several Hamas officials in Doha.

The airstrikes were widely condemned across the Arab and Islamic world as a violation of Qatar’s sovereignty and international law.


From Gaza to Europe, via jet ski: Muhammad Abu Dakha’s daring escape story

From Gaza to Europe, via jet ski: Muhammad Abu Dakha’s daring escape story
Updated 15 September 2025

From Gaza to Europe, via jet ski: Muhammad Abu Dakha’s daring escape story

From Gaza to Europe, via jet ski: Muhammad Abu Dakha’s daring escape story
  • Muhammad Abu Dakha says he has applied for asylum, and is waiting for a court to examine his application, with no date set yet for a hearing
  • Abu Dakha’s family remains in a tent camp in Khan Younis in southern Gaza, their home destroyed

LAMPEDUSA: It took more than a year, several thousand dollars, ingenuity, setbacks and a jet ski: this is how Muhammad Abu Dakha, a 31-year-old Palestinian, managed to escape from Gaza to reach Europe.
He documented his story through videos, photographs and audio files, which he shared with Reuters. Reuters also interviewed him and his travel companions upon their arrival in Italy, and their relatives in the Gaza Strip.
Fleeing the devastation caused by the nearly two-year-old Israel-Hamas war, in which Gaza health authorities say more than 57,000 Palestinians have been killed, Abu Dakha crossed the Rafah border point into Egypt in April 2024, paying $5,000.

TO CHINA AND BACK
He said he initially went to China, where he hoped to win asylum, but returned to Egypt, via Malaysia and Indonesia, after that failed. He showed Reuters email correspondence with the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) Representation in China from August and September 2024.
Abu Dakha then went to Libya where, according to multiple reports by human rights groups and the UN, tens of thousands of migrants are routinely abused and exploited by traffickers and militias while trying to secure a spot on a boat to Europe.
According to data from Italy’s interior ministry, more than 47,000 boat migrants have arrived in the country in the year to date, mostly from Libya and Tunisia. But Abu Dakha made it across in highly unusual circumstances.
After 10 failed crossing attempts with smugglers, he said he purchased a used Yamaha jet ski for about $5,000 through a Libyan online marketplace and invested another $1,500 in equipment, including a GPS, a satellite phone and life jackets.
Accompanied by two other Palestinians, 27-year-old Diaa and 23-year-old Bassem, he said he drove the jet ski for about 12 hours, seeing off a chasing Tunisian patrol boat, all while towing a dinghy with extra supplies.
The trio used ChatGPT to calculate how much fuel they would need, but still ran out some 20 km (12 miles) shy of Lampedusa. They managed to call for help, prompting a rescue and their landing on Italy’s southernmost island on August 18.
They were picked up by a Romanian patrol boat taking part in a Frontex mission, a spokesperson for the European Union’s border agency said, describing the circumstances as “an unusual occurrence.”
“It was a very difficult journey, but we were adventurers. We had strong hope that we would arrive, and God gave us strength,” said Bassem, who did not share his surname.
“The way they came was pretty unique,” said Filippo Ungaro, spokesperson for UNHCR Italy, confirming that authorities recorded their arrival in Italy after a jet ski journey from the Libyan port of Al-Khoms and a rescue off Lampedusa.
In a straight line, Al-Khoms is about 350 km from Lampedusa.
Abu Dakha contacted Reuters while staying in Lampedusa’s migrant center, after being told by a member of the staff there that his arrival via jet ski had been reported by local media.
From that point he shared material and documents, although Reuters was unable to confirm certain aspects of his account.

FROM LAMPEDUSA TO GERMANY
From Lampedusa, the odyssey continued. The three men were taken by ferry to mainland Sicily, then transferred to Genoa in northwestern Italy, but escaped from the bus transporting them before getting to their destination.
A spokesperson for the Italian interior ministry said it had no specific information about the trio’s movements.
After hiding in bushes for a few hours, Abu Dakha took a plane from Genoa to Brussels. He shared with Reuters a boarding card in his name for a low-cost flight from Genoa to Brussels Charleroi, dated August 23.
From Brussels, he said he traveled to Germany, first taking a train to Cologne, then to Osnabrueck in Lower Saxony, where a relative picked him up by car and took him to Bramsche, a nearby town.
He says he has applied for asylum, and is waiting for a court to examine his application, with no date set yet for a hearing. He has no job or income and is staying in a local center for asylum seekers.
Germany’s Federal Office for Migration and Refugees declined to comment on his case, citing privacy reasons.
Abu Dakha’s family remains in a tent camp in Khan Younis in southern Gaza, their home destroyed.
“He had an Internet shop, and his work, thank God, was comfortable financially and everything. He had built things up, and it all collapsed,” said his father, Intesar Khouder Abu Dakha, speaking from Gaza.
Abu Dakha hopes to win the right to stay in Germany, and bring over his wife and two children, aged four and six. He said one of them suffers from a neurological condition requiring medical care.
“That’s why I risked my life on a jet ski,” he said. “Without my family, life has no meaning.”


Gaza aid flotilla carrying Greta Thunberg departs Tunisia

Gaza aid flotilla carrying Greta Thunberg departs Tunisia
Updated 15 September 2025

Gaza aid flotilla carrying Greta Thunberg departs Tunisia

Gaza aid flotilla carrying Greta Thunberg departs Tunisia
  • Around 20 boats that had sailed from Barcelona converged in Bizerte
  • The Global Sumud Flotilla said two of its boats were targeted by drone attacks on consecutive nights last week

BIZERTE: A flotilla bound for Gaza carrying aid and pro-Palestinian activists set sail Monday from Tunisia after repeated delays, aiming to break Israel's blockade and establish a humanitarian corridor to the Palestinian territory.
"We are also trying to send a message to the people of Gaza that the world has not forgotten about you," Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg said before boarding in the northern port of Bizerte.
"When our governments are failing to step up then we have no choice but to take matters into our own hands," she told AFP.
Around 20 boats that had sailed from Barcelona converged in Bizerte, with the last vessels leaving at dawn, an AFP journalist reported.
Yasemin Acar, who helps coordinate the flotilla from the Maghreb, posted images on Instagram of boats also departing in the early hours.
"The blockade of Gaza must end" and "We are leaving for solidarity, dignity and justice", the caption said.
The vessels had transferred to Bizerte after a turbulent stay in Sidi Bou Said near Tunis.
The Global Sumud Flotilla said two of its boats were targeted by drone attacks on consecutive nights last week.
After the second incident, Tunisian authorities denounced what they called a "premeditated aggression" and announced an investigation.
European Parliament member Rima Hassan, who like Thunberg was detained aboard the Madleen sailboat during an attempt to reach Gaza in June, said she feared further attacks.
"We are preparing for different scenarios," she said, noting the most prominent figures had been split between the two largest coordinating boats "to balance things out and avoid concentrating all the visible personalities on a single vessel".
The departure had been repeatedly postponed due to security concerns, delays in preparing some of the boats and weather conditions.
The flotilla, which also includes vessels that left in recent days from Corsica, Sicily and Greece, had originally planned to reach Gaza by mid-September, after two earlier attempts were blocked by Israel in June and July.