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Diplomatic correspondence
Majid Shaghnobi cannot be eaten or talked as talk. He can’t smile.
But a surgical mask covered in the injured mouth, when his eyes came to the Heathrow Airport in London, reached a flight of Cairo, with his mother, brother, and small sister.
“I’m glad to get in England and treatment,” 15-year-olds told me.
He was trying to achieve humanitarian assistance in the northern Kuwaitz of Gaza, when the Israeli tank broke in February last year, broke his jaw bone and injured his leg.
“One of my friends helped me and took me to the hospital,” he said. “They thought I was dead. I had to move his hand to show you alive.”
Doctors in Gaza saved his life and spent a few months in the hospital, inhaled through a tracheostomy tube before evacuating in Egypt in February – medical leave.
It is now located in the UK at the London street hospital in the hospital of London to restore its face function.
Gazan is a baby to treat war injuries in the UK, almost two years that are killed or injured by more than 50,000 children. UNICEF UNICEF UNICEF’s charity.
His arrival worked by a team of medical medical professionals who met in November 2023. To set up pure expectation of the project. They finance private donations.
“UK are some of the best pediatric facilities in the world, but many of the U.S. countries, Belgium, Italy, Switzerland and many others, has not yet do the same thing,” says Project Hope says.
Arrival in Majid comes in less than a week in the UK after Sir Keir Starmer Prime Minister has ordered to evacuate More injured children, even the government has released few details of the plan.
Majid’s Medical Team – All working free – including craniofacial, plastic and orthodontic surgeons, including the hospital bills paid by private donations.
“He can use a face and jaw, it won’t be completely normal, but we hope that they will be able to feed and speak, and their facial expressions will be better,” he says a pediatric neuroine teacher.
“I hope this has a great influence on how it lives and in their future.
“Our hope is that we will be able to help more children like them in the coming months. It is our collective moral responsibility.”
Hospital doctors have treated Ukraine’s patient earlier, and last year’s twins of Israel helped distinguish.
The Jelani teacher is disappointed to treat injuries in the UK for the first child of Gaza.
“As a doctor and as a human being, I don’t understand why it took us to reach this phase of over 20 months,” he noted.
The expectation of the project has harm 30 injured children in Gaza hoping to take it to the UK. He says that the government’s announcement is “essential and long”, but it’s time essence.
“Everyday delays are worth living in the life of children and risks the life of life and rebuilding life,” Omar Dinek said, his creators.
In April, the Volunteer group secured visas for two girls, with a 193-year-old Rama and five-year-old Ghena – with a life medical conditions in the UK.
Were Bring to London After evacuating Egypt from Gaza, where – with the destruction of the health system, they did not receive treatment they needed.
Since I met early May, Rama has put weight and ghena, depicted deeply and retired, is more pronounced.
Ghena has laser surgery to relieve pressure in the left eye, which was in danger of losing. And Rama has had surgery explorer for a serious intestinal situation.
The two girls are doing well, mothers say.
But they are worried about the sick – it’s hard to eat and sleep. About family members left in Gaza, who are fighting for those who are feeding themselves today.
“It’s better than Gaza here,” Ram said. “There are no bombs and no fear.”
But friends send a message from Gaza, that they did not find bread for 10 days and said his older brother sleeping on the street, and then they bombed his tent.
“They’re hungry. So I don’t want to eat one. I feel like I’ve been with them,” Ramak said.
The incised experts said that this week was hungry, malnutrition and disease that was encouraging the rise of death among 2.1 million Palestinians.
Majid, when he suffered injuries to change life, trying to get food for his family, he is still worried about his two brothers in Gaza.
“I’m afraid that they will die or something will happen,” he said. “I want to be safe.”