Mohammed Mostafa al-Mohammed is among those who have recently graduated from the ‘Aleppo University in Liberated Areas,’ in northwestern Syria’s rebel-held region, AFP reported. The university at Aleppo’s Azaz is run by Syria’s political opposition.
The 29-year-old graduate had expected to be tending to the wounded under the threat of bombardment by the Syrian forces, but is faced with a new challenge — the novel coronavirus.
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“Our dream is to build Syria and treat the sick,” Mohammed, 29, told AFP at his graduation ceremony.
But “we’re facing a difficult challenge” with the coronavirus, said the rescue worker turned doctor.
Humanitarian workers fear any further rise in novel coronavirus cases would be disastrous in northwestern Syria, where around half of three million people live in overcrowded camps or temporary shelters after being displaced by conflict.
In capital Idlib and adjacent parts of Aleppo province, opposition officials have recorded almost 15,766 novel coronavirus infections in total, including 166 deaths.
Around two-thirds of all confirmed COVID-19 cases in northwestern Syria have been announced over the past month.
Mohammed was among the first 32 doctors who graduated from the opposition backed institute that was founded in 2014.
Mohammed, who hails from eastern Syria, had to put his studies on hold in 2012, as war broke out in the country in 2011.
For two years, he volunteered as a rescue worker to help those wounded in bombardment on rebel-held areas, before resuming his studies from scratch in 2014.
“We were constantly exposed to airstrikes and artillery fire,” he said of his time with the Syrian Civil Defence first responders known as the “White Helmets”.
Syria’s war has killed more than 380,000 people and displaced millions from their homes since starting in 2011 with the brutal repression of anti-government protests.
It has also ravaged a large part of the health sector and pushed 70% of health workers to flee the country.
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Doctors who stayed behind have had to battle COVID-19.
The dean of the faculty of medicine, Jawad Abu Hatab, said confronting a pandemic in a country already battered by nearly a decade of war was no small feat.
“Coronavirus is a challenge for all health sectors even in stable countries,” said the doctor and former head of the opposition “Syrian Interim Government”, AFP reported.
The World Health Organization has recorded 337 attacks on healthcare facilities in northwestern Syria between 2016 and 2019.
By March, it said only half of 550 health facilities in the region remained open due to damage, insecurity or people having fled the surrounding area.
Over the past months, humanitarian actors have scrambled to help increase testing capacities and the number of beds ready to receive patients suffering from COVID-19.
At the Azaz-based university, some more than 1,000 undergraduate medical and pharmacy students are hoping to play their part.
Mohammed Shaashaa, who is studying to be a doctor, is one of them.
“Since 2011, medical staff has dwindled because of doctors emigrating, being detained, or even some having been killed,” the 26-year old told AFP.
“We signed up to study medicine to serve our people,” he said.
“It was our duty” to help, he added.