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Syria: Belarusian field military hospital starts providing medical care to patients in quake-hit Aleppo٠٠:٠٣:٥١
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Belarusian field military hospital was equipped in Aleppo to provide medical assistance to the city patients after the devastating earthquake, as footage filmed on Monday shows.

The field hospital tents were equipped with ophthalmological, otolaryngological, ENT, x-rays and a mobile laboratory, and it has around 45 medical personnel on board, according to Talal Marashi, a doctor at the hospital.

According to the head of the Medical Centre, Andrey Barinovich, it was opened three days ago, and now it is able to receive 72 patients a day.

"Now we have already the number of patients exceeded 200 people a day. people trust us, so people come to us for medical help, and we will try not to let them down in this. For these purposes, we took the latest equipment," he explained.

On Monday, February 6, two earthquakes hit Syria and Turkey, devastating cities across the two countries. Many buildings collapsed, with Aleppo and Haman Idlab affected the most in Syria.

At the time of publication, the combined death toll exceeded 47,000 twelve days after the devastating earthquake. Around 41,642 have reportedly been killed in Turkey as well as 5,800 deaths in Syria.

Earlier on Monday, new quakes, magnitude 6.3 and 5.8, rocked Turkey and Syria border region leaving six dead and about 200 injured.

Syria: Belarusian field military hospital starts providing medical care to patients in quake-hit Aleppo

Syrian Arab Republic, Aleppo
فبراير ٢١, ٢٠٢٣ at ٠٨:٣٦ GMT +00:00 · Published

Belarusian field military hospital was equipped in Aleppo to provide medical assistance to the city patients after the devastating earthquake, as footage filmed on Monday shows.

The field hospital tents were equipped with ophthalmological, otolaryngological, ENT, x-rays and a mobile laboratory, and it has around 45 medical personnel on board, according to Talal Marashi, a doctor at the hospital.

According to the head of the Medical Centre, Andrey Barinovich, it was opened three days ago, and now it is able to receive 72 patients a day.

"Now we have already the number of patients exceeded 200 people a day. people trust us, so people come to us for medical help, and we will try not to let them down in this. For these purposes, we took the latest equipment," he explained.

On Monday, February 6, two earthquakes hit Syria and Turkey, devastating cities across the two countries. Many buildings collapsed, with Aleppo and Haman Idlab affected the most in Syria.

At the time of publication, the combined death toll exceeded 47,000 twelve days after the devastating earthquake. Around 41,642 have reportedly been killed in Turkey as well as 5,800 deaths in Syria.

Earlier on Monday, new quakes, magnitude 6.3 and 5.8, rocked Turkey and Syria border region leaving six dead and about 200 injured.

Description

Belarusian field military hospital was equipped in Aleppo to provide medical assistance to the city patients after the devastating earthquake, as footage filmed on Monday shows.

The field hospital tents were equipped with ophthalmological, otolaryngological, ENT, x-rays and a mobile laboratory, and it has around 45 medical personnel on board, according to Talal Marashi, a doctor at the hospital.

According to the head of the Medical Centre, Andrey Barinovich, it was opened three days ago, and now it is able to receive 72 patients a day.

"Now we have already the number of patients exceeded 200 people a day. people trust us, so people come to us for medical help, and we will try not to let them down in this. For these purposes, we took the latest equipment," he explained.

On Monday, February 6, two earthquakes hit Syria and Turkey, devastating cities across the two countries. Many buildings collapsed, with Aleppo and Haman Idlab affected the most in Syria.

At the time of publication, the combined death toll exceeded 47,000 twelve days after the devastating earthquake. Around 41,642 have reportedly been killed in Turkey as well as 5,800 deaths in Syria.

Earlier on Monday, new quakes, magnitude 6.3 and 5.8, rocked Turkey and Syria border region leaving six dead and about 200 injured.

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