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Gaza: The death of a beloved father illustrates the savage cost of the war: ‘The ambulance couldn’t come’


Mohammed Dawwas, a highly respected translator, fixer and journalist who worked for The Independent for decades has died from lack of medicine and crucial medical care after being forced to flee with his family from their home in northern Gaza.

The Dawwas family were among the civilians who left Gaza City and headed south on instructions of the Israeli military. They sought refuge in Deir al Balah, about 10 miles south, before that became another town to be hit in an airstrike, killing, according to Palestinian health authorities, 45 people and injuring 50 others.

Mohammed was partially paralysed due to a stroke he suffered five years ago. He had another stroke, brought about, say his family, by the stress of the situation inside Gaza. He did not survive this time.

Ambulances could not get through to the area where the family were staying due to ongoing bombing. The family had run out of the medicine Mohammed was taking, and no further supplies were available in the chaotic conditions. One of the few neighbours who has stayed behind in Gaza City went to the Dawwas home to see if any of the drugs had been left behind in the rush to leave. They found the building had been destroyed.

Fifteen members of the extended Dawwas family have been killed in the war so far. Mohammed’s wife Tahani, three daughters, and a five year old granddaughter, Sophie, have been granted asylum in Australia, but remain trapped in southern Gaza, deeply worried about what may befall as the fighting closes in around them.

There is little chance of the conflict ending anytime soon. According to the health authorities in Gaza, more than 20,000 Palestinians have been killed there since the Israeli military launched their offensive after Hamas massacred 1,200 people and abducted 240 others in a cross-border raid in October. The Palestinian health authority say 241 more people were killed in the last 24 hours, mostly in airstrikes.

Despite repeated calls for a ceasfire from international leaders and senior religious figures, including Pope Francis and the Archbishop of Canterbury, Israel’s prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu has declared: “We are not stopping. The war will continue until the end, until we finish, no less.”

Yasmine Dawwas, a daughter of Mohammed, who know lives abroad

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One of the Dawwas daughters, 18-year-old Hala, needs continuing medical care – including surgery – due to a car accident 14 years ago in which she was seriously injured. Her condition, say the family, is deteriorating alarmingly.

Yasmine Dawwas, a daughter of Mohammed who has also worked as a translator for The Independent in the past, is now a doctor living abroad.

She said: “We feel so desperately sad. I couldn’t be there when my father died. My mother and sisters saw him pass away and could do nothing. He was struggling to breathe and needed to see a doctor, but the ambulance couldn’t come. It’s so painful to think about what happened.

“My mother was saying she did not know what was worse, having someone you love get killed instantly in this war, or see him die slowly knowing he could have lived if he only had access to medicine,” Yasmine added.

“We have to now think about Hala. She had operations after the accident and she was scheduled for more surgery for injuries to her pelvic region, but, of course, that did not happen after the war started. She has now got an infection because of contaminated water, but they can’t get any antibiotics to treat it.

“Every generation is affected by what’s happening. My niece, Sophie, is very young, she is having nightmares about what she has seen and heard. So many young people in Gaza who survive all this are going to grow up with traumatic memories.

“Lists of names of those who are allowed to leave Gaza is published every day. These lists have to be approved by the Israeli and Egyptian authorities, and so every day we wait to see if the names are on the list, but that hasn’t happened yet. We need to keep on hoping,” she said.

Mohammed’s granddaughter Sophie, right, and her mother, Mariam, in happier times

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Mohammed had worked for The Independent with correspondents including Robert Fisk, Donald Macintyre, Alistair Dawber and myself. I had also worked extensively with Yasmine covering Gaza wars after his illness.

Mohammed wrote a diary for The Independent on Sunday during the 2009 war, which received wide praise for being vivid and moving in describing living in a state of strife. He forcefully stressed the need for a peaceful solution to the Israeli-Palestinian crisis saying he had seen too many people killed and injured in the wars he covered.

Although Mohammed was not killed directly by military action, his family say that he is very much a casualty of this war. Between 78 and 100 Palestinian journalists are estimated to have been killed in Gaza since the war started in October.

Unlike most of the previous Gaza wars, foreign journalists have not been allowed to carry out independent reporting from the territory. The Committee for the Protection of Journalists (CPJ) based in New York, point out this has been the most lethal war for the media to cover in modern times. After the death toll past 68, it said: “More journalists have been killed in the first 10 weeks of the Israel-Gaza war than have ever been killed in a single country over an entire year.”

As well as The Independent, Mohammed had worked, over the years, with other news organisations including Der Spiegel, La Repubblica, Voice of America and The Sunday Times.

Suzie, Hala and Mariam Dawwas before the latest war

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Donald Macintyre said: “Mohammed knew everybody and everything in Gaza. Like all the best Palestinian journalists he was not affiliated with any faction but was on familiar terms with all their leading figures.

“As I recall he had even played football as a teenager against Ismail Haniyeh, now the exiled political head of Hamas. But he was every bit as home with ‘ordinary’ Gazans, and more often than not an interview with Mohammed and whoever we were seeing began with them exchanging their knowledge of members of the other’s family.

“Mohammed was from a refugee family and for an Independent story on the 70th anniversary of the birth of Israel – and the flight of more than 700,000 Palestinians from their homes in what is now Israel – he was kind enough to introduce me to his proud uncle. [He was] old enough to remember the 1948 war, until which he had lived as boy in Deir Suneid, so close to what is now the Gaza Strip, until its residents were forced to flee,” Macintyre added.

“Like so many Palestinians of his generation, Dawwas was both a devoted family man and had a passionate belief in education. The fruits of this are palpable in all his children.”

Alistair Dawber, now the Washington correspondent of The Times and The Sunday Times, spoke of “a consummate professional working in Gaza. Like all the best of those that do the vital but often unsung behind-the-scenes job of connecting a correspondent with contacts, he would sometimes roll his eyes at a reporter’s latest idea, but would always produce at the end.

“On one occasion, The Independent’s correspondent asked him to find six people from different walks of life in Gaza, all to be interviewed and photographed for a magazine piece, and all to be done that day. He sucked his teeth and more politely than necessary suggested that more than 24 hours notice would have been useful.

“Of course, by the end of the day, the six interviews – from farmers working close to the border, Hamas officials, fishermen bringing in the day’s catch, and those operating in the tunnels that brought in supplies through Rafah – were all completed, all achieved through his dogged determination and a contact book surpassed nowhere else in Gaza,” Dawber added.

“Mohammed’s death is a very sad loss to his family, his friends, and to journalism.”



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