KABUL, Afghanistan —
By the time Saifullah reached the Doctors Without Borders hospital, he had been
transporting his wounded family members on donkey and horseback for six hours
in search of medical treatment.
Not long after they
arrived at the charity's facility in the Afghan battleground city of Kunduz, it
would be devastated by "sustained bombing" from a U.S. warplane that
killed 22 people including staff members, patients and children.
Saifullah's brother,
one of his sons and a nephew were killed as they lay in their hospital beds, he
said.
"All of sudden
we heard loud explosions that shook the entire building and there were all
shouts all over and everyone was running up and down," the 38-year-old
told NBC News.
Saifullah, who did
not give his last name, said he set off for the hospital Friday after two
rockets hit his house. His 70-year-old mother and one of his brothers were
killed the attack in the Chardara district of Kunduz province. One of his sons,
a daughter and a nephew were injured, Saifullah said.
Carrying his wounded
relatives on horses and donkeys, he and his family began the six-hour journey —
crossing multiple front lines — and arrived late that night at the hospital run
by Doctors Without Borders, which is also known as Médecins Sans Frontières.
His injured family
members were rushed into an operating room and the rest were told to stay in a
large waiting area. Despite the sound of gunfire and explosions around the
building, they fell asleep.
Hours later, the
bombardment began.
Saifullah was able
to escape and hide behind some shops across the street.
"The bombing
continued three or four times for about an hour and then stopped," he
said, speaking outside a hospital in Kabul where his surviving families members
were being treated Sunday. "But we did not leave our hiding place and
could see parts of the building on fire and heavy firing all around."
Between the rocket
attack on his home and the apparent U.S. airstrike, Saifullah lost five family
members over the course of several hours.
A third brother lost
his leg in the hospital bombing, and another of his sons, 5-year-old Fayaz, and
his wife received injuries to their necks.
A nurse at the
Doctors Without Borders hospital described the bombardment.
"There are no
words for how terrible it was," Lajos Zoltan told the charity. "In
the intensive care unit, six patients were burning in their beds. A patient was
there on the operating table, dead, in the middle of the destruction."
Another patient, who
identified himself only as Karim, had been brought to the Doctors Without
Borders hospital in Kunduz having been injured in what he said was another
bombing by "airplanes."
"The hospital
was bombed and most of the patients and doctors were killed," Karim said
from a hospital bed in Puli Khumri, 50 miles south of Kunduz, after being moved
there. "Some relatives brought me here and I am here now for the past two
days and don't know anything about my family."
Atta Mohammad, a
community representative of an area in Kunduz city, was also at the hospital.
"They bombed
the Doctors Without Borders hospital, which was the only hospital in Kunduz
helping people," he said. "When the hospital is bombed by government
itself then where is safe?"
Doctors Without
Borders has called for an independent investigation into the incident."
The charity has left the city as it said the hospital was "not functional
anymore."
On Monday, the top
commander of U.S. and coalition forces in Afghanistan said the airstrike was
requested by Afghan forces who reported being under Taliban fire. General John
F. Campbell said he was correcting an initial U.S. statement that said the airstrike
had been in response to threats against U.S. forces.
"If errors were
committed we will acknowledge them," Campbell added.
President Barack
Obama has offered his condolences to the victims and said he will be kept
updated on any developments into the investigation of the bombing.
Taliban militants
captured most of the city of 300,000 people last week but two days before the
deadly hospital airstrike Afghan officials insisted they were in "full
control" of Kunduz.
This article talks
about how the only functional hospital in Afghanistan, doctors without borders
hospital, was bombed by the U.S. Since the author, Rahim Fazul is an
Afghanistan reporter I think he might be biased in sympathizing for the victims
and putting the U.S. in a negative light. I would agree that the bombings
weren't necessary and were horrible ideas, but since the U.S. might have
reasons behind their actions I wouldn't go into complete disagreement. I just
think the fact that the U.S. bombed a hospital was wrong, the fact that a
strong country would attack a harmless place like a hospital in Afghanistan.
Also, the fact that the reporter shared an explicit and extinguished story of
one family and their losses help us relate to the incident and a distention
towards to the U.S.
Rahim, Fazul. "
NBC News." 5 Oct. 2015. CNBC.
5 Oct. 2015. <http://www.nbcnews.com/news/world/doctors-without-borders-hospital-bombing-witnesses-recount-strikes-n438506>
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