White Helmets
'White Helmets' bring civilian aid to Syria's conflict
By Dr. Sanjay Gupta, Chief Medical Correspondent
May 27, 2015
Turkey (CNN)In the last five years, life expectancy has dropped by nearly 20 years in Syria. It is an astonishing figure.
And the reason
is not because of deadly infectious diseases or lack of clean water,
although those are problems there as well. Instead, it has to do
primarily with rusty old barrels that are packed with explosives and
hurtled out of helicopters onto large neighborhoods. These barrels often
contain nails, wire, glass and anything else that can brutally maim and
destroy a human body.
The images are awful to imagine, and even worse to see.
According to
the Syrian Civil Defense, barrel bombs, as they are called, are now the
greatest killer of civilians in many parts of Syria.
Every time one
of these barrels strikes, it is the seismological equivalent of a 7.6
magnitude earthquake, and it happens around 50 times a day. While I
spoke to James Le Mesurier in Southern Turkey last night, he received
word that three more barrel bombs had fallen in just the past few hours.
He also told me that when this happens, there is no one for the average
citizen to call. "You can't dial 911. You can't dial the fire service.
You can't call the local police department. They don't exist."
Over time, it
was ordinary men who started to respond to the explosions, fires and
attacks. Barbers, bakers, students and electricians, to name a few --
consistently showed up to help in any way they could. In many of these
areas, it was the same people who kept running into each other while
conducting rescues. Most had bought helmets that were white, instead of
colored, simply because they were cheaper. And, according to James, it
was the local media who first asked "who are all those guys with the
white helmets?" It was the birth of a humanitarian organization that
three years later has saved 18,000 lives, and recently been nominated
for the Nobel Peace Prize.
There are now
around 2,600 White Helmets, including 56 women who joined over the last
several months. In some of Syria's more conservative communities, women
trapped in the rubble cannot be rescued by a man no matter how dire the
situation. For them, the women of the White Helmets satisfy an unmet
need.
Obama says Syria war unlikely to end during his presidency
Over the last
few days, I have had a chance to sit down and talk to 25 of the White
Helmets to try and better understand their lives, their motivations and
their future. We were in Southern Turkey, not too far from the border
with Syria, where the White Helmets were going through a sophisticated
training exercise. I was invited to tag along. On our first day, the men
all sat in a circle with me, and just started gushing their stories. It
was almost cathartic for them, maybe even therapeutic.
Every single one of them raised their hands when asked if they had personally saved a life.
Ibrahim
Armanazi, age 28, worked as a barber. He saved a 17-year-old woman with a
head injury after a bombing near a local bakery. Abdul Kader Suleyman,
32, is a farmer who saved a 7-month-old girl after two thermobaric
missiles hit the town of Darkoush. Mohammed Ata Rashwani, 44, previously
worked as a hospital administrator. He rushed to the scene of a missile
attack, and "rescued a man whose entire lower half was buried." It was
only later that he added something I will never forget. Mohammed joined
the White Helmets five days after his son was killed doing the very same
job.
Ahmad Rahhal
worked as a policeman, and at age 27 moved up the ranks quickly to
detective. He told the story of two other White Helmets, who had died
after being "double tapped." This is a particularly malicious act that
occurs when a helicopter carries two barrel bombs. After dropping the
first one, the helicopter circles in the sky waiting for the first
responders to arrive. Once a big enough crowd has gathered, they drop
the second bomb.
It is different level of savagery.
Ahmad survived that double tap, and was able to also rescue three young girls, who are alive and well.
Ahmad, like
all the other White Helmets, is doing his part to turn around the
plummeting life expectancy in Syria. And, for him, it is even more
personal than that. He is getting married next week, and will be
starting a family of his own. When he shared that news, the entire group
of hardened White Helmets broke out into spontaneous applause, hooting
and hollering.
Despite all
they have seen and endured, the men and women who wear the white helmets
believe Syria and its citizens can be saved. They have a palpable
optimism about the future -- and, they want to share it with everyone.
Syrians look
for survivors amid the rubble of a building targeted by a missile in the
al-Mashhad neighborhood of Aleppo on January 7, 2013.
http://edition.cnn.com/2015/05/21/health/white-helmets-profile/index.html
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