Gaza doctor amputates niece's leg at home, without anesthesia

Intense fire made it impossible to reach nearby hospital

 Palestinians at the rubble of a destroyed building after an Israeli airstrike in Khan Yunis, in the southern Gaza Strip, on November 12, 2023 (photo credit: ATIA MOHAMMED/FLASH90)
Palestinians at the rubble of a destroyed building after an Israeli airstrike in Khan Yunis, in the southern Gaza Strip, on November 12, 2023
(photo credit: ATIA MOHAMMED/FLASH90)

Palestinian doctor Hani Bseiso faced an agonizing decision when his teenage niece was wounded by Israeli shelling of her Gaza City home: amputate her leg or risk her bleeding to death.

Unable to reach a nearby hospital, and using little more than a pair of scissors and some gauze he had in his medical bag, he removed the lower part of A'Hed Bseiso's right leg in an operation carried out on the kitchen table without anesthetic.

Grainy video footage that went viral on Instagram shows him wiping the bloody stump of her right leg as she lies on the table. One of her brothers holds her steady, another holds up two mobile phones to provide better lighting.

The house is only 1.1 miles (1.8 km) from Gaza's Al-Shifa hospital, usually a six-minute drive or a 25-minute walk away, but Bseiso said intense Israeli fire in the area made it too dangerous to try to get there.

"Unfortunately, I did not have any other choice. The choice was that I either let the girl die or I try to the best of my abilities," Bseiso told Reuters this week in an interview in the room where he amputated her leg on Dec. 19.

 PALESTINIAN CHILDREN walk through the rubble of a destroyed building in Gaza City, following Operation Breaking Dawn (credit: ATTIA MUHAMMED/FLASH90)
PALESTINIAN CHILDREN walk through the rubble of a destroyed building in Gaza City, following Operation Breaking Dawn (credit: ATTIA MUHAMMED/FLASH90)

Reuters was unable to confirm independently what struck her home, why it came under fire and what events preceded the attack.

"Could I get her to the hospital? Of course not," Bseiso said, describing the area as "under siege." "The tanks were at the entrance of the house."

Israeli authorities say they work to minimize harm to civilians.

Asked for comment about the events of Dec. 19, the Israeli military did not specifically respond to questions about the incident at A'Hed Bseiso's home, but said Hamas used hospital complexes as cover, an allegation the militant group denies.

"A central feature of Hamas' strategy is the exploitation of civilian structures for terror purposes," the IDF told Reuters.


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"Specifically, it has been well documented that Hamas uses hospitals and medical centers for its terror activities by building military networks within and beneath hospitals, launching attacks and storing weapons within the confines of hospitals, and using hospital infrastructure and staff for terror activities."

"Regrettably, Hamas continues to put Gaza's most vulnerable citizens in serious danger by cynically using hospitals for terror," it said.

"Thanks to God"

A'hed Bseiso, 18, is part of a generation of young amputees emerging from the war being fought in Gaza since Hamas terrorists attacked Israel on Oct. 7, killing about 1,200 people and taking 253 hostage, according to Israeli tallies.

 PALESTINIAN CHILDREN are nearby as Islamic Jihad militants march in Rafah, Gaza Strip, on Wednesday. To many Arabs, Gaza militants are one of the groups that take civilians as human shields to serve Iran’s grand expansionist strategy, says the writer.  (credit: IBRAHEEM ABU MUSTAFA/REUTERS)
PALESTINIAN CHILDREN are nearby as Islamic Jihad militants march in Rafah, Gaza Strip, on Wednesday. To many Arabs, Gaza militants are one of the groups that take civilians as human shields to serve Iran’s grand expansionist strategy, says the writer. (credit: IBRAHEEM ABU MUSTAFA/REUTERS)

Doctors say many of those killed in the Gaza Strip since then might have been saved if they had been able to reach hospital.

Lying in bed several weeks after the amputation, A'hed Bseiso told Reuters she found an Israeli tank near her house when she went outside at about 10:30 a.m. to get a signal to call her father, who lives abroad.

She and her sister went inside and closed the blinds of the house in case it was shelled. Shortly afterwards, the building came under fire and she was wounded, she said.

She realized she had no feeling in her leg when family members tried to help her by pulling out shrapnel.

"They placed me on the dining table. There was no medical equipment. My uncle saw the sponge that we clean the dishes with, a wire, washing-up liquid and chlorine (disinfectant)," she said.

"He took them and he started scrubbing my leg. He amputated my leg without anesthetics and without anything at home."

Asked how she withstood the pain, she said: "I was just saying 'Thanks to God' and reading the Quran. Thanks to God, I did not feel much but of course there was pain, and the scene and the shock."

She has since undergone further operations in a hospital to treat the injuries she received.

More than 24,000 Palestinians have been killed since Israel began its ground operation in Gaza in response to the Oct. 7 attack, Palestinian officials say.

Many others, including children, have had limbs amputated because of the severity of their wounds during the Israeli offensive, which Israel's military says is intended to eliminate Hamas and secure the release of the remaining hostages.

More than 1,000 children in Gaza had undergone leg amputations by the end of November, according to the UN children's agency UNICEF.

Poor hygiene and shortages of medicine further endanger lives, and doctors say supplies to hospitals are hindered by the lack of access to them.