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HASAKA, Syria (Reuters) - The paramedics' log at al-Hol camp in eastern Syria lists the injuries and diseases of infants rushed from the battlefield to its crowded, dirty clinic: malnutrition, stunted growth, broken leg.
Those in critical need - mostly emaciated babies born in the wives of the Islamic State militants - are taken to the nearest hospital, a bumpy two-hour drive away. Other people found a waiting room with a tin roof in a growing queue for basic medical treatment.
At the hospital, staff had had two portacabins on the roof that served as a forhift ward for the treatment of malnourished children, crammed sometimes two or three to a cot.
Lower floors are loaded with teenagers and limbs and women with shrapnel and bullet wounds.
The exodus during intense fighting of more than 60,000 people from the Islamic State's final redoubt of Baghouz is the overwhelming medical staff in the Eastern Syria, which has been struggling to cope with the camp and ill-equipped hospitals.
Scores of people, mostly children, have died on the 150-mile (240-kilometer) journey to al-Hol or soon after arriving, help groups say
"My son has a dislocated hip. He needs an operation urgently, "said Umm Mohammed, a veiled 33-year-old woman holding an expressionless six-month-old boy at the camp.
"Medics keep saying they have more urgent cases to deal with - wounds and shrapnel injuries."
In the waiting area, dozens of people who mostly left Baghouz during a brief truce last month, arranged for civilians and surrendering militants to evacuate, wooden benches or concrete floors on sit. Children in wheelchairs watch while babies scream as they are bandaged or given injections.
U.S.-backed forces declared the defeat in the March of Islamic State's self-proclaimed caliphate - the territory it once held in Iraq and Syria - after militants were driven out of Baghouz village, where they lasted a month-long last stand.
The intense bombardment and fighting to dislodge the Sunni Islamist extremist group cost countless lives and the wounded many more people, including the wives of fighters, their children, IS supporters and other civilians trapped by the militants in the enclave.
Those who evacuated in recent weeks have strained healthcare in Kurdish-run areas of eastern Syria beyond capacity.
In the clinic at al-Hol, which is hosting more than 70,000 people displaced by violence, many people wore crude casts. One woman said that she did not have enough painkillers for a wound to her hand - a long metal rod from the explosion that wounded her and killed three relatives still her knuckle in lodged.
"I just want an X-ray at the hospital," she said, giving her name as Umm Ahmed.
STARVING CHILDREN OF ISLAMIC STATE
But local hospitals can take only the most severe cases
In one room at the hospital in the nearby town Hasaka, 19-year-old Baraa al-Kurdi, the wife of a Syrian Islamic State member, lay motionless next to a boy with third-degree burns covering his head.
"I was hit in the head by shrapnel," Kurdi said quietly. "We were next to a car packed with ammunition and explosives, including suicide belts.
"My husband was killed. My daughter is one month old - she's upstairs in the babies' ward. "
Kurdi's daughter was one of the few non-foreign infants in the ward.
Others, many blond or with Asian features, lay quietly in their cots with cheekbones showing and eyes sunken in their sockets from malnutrition. The patients' register listed the names their mothers gave the hospital - Ali Azerbaijani, Ali al-Uzbeki, Mohamed Skramo, a Norwegian name.
Many who stayed in the Battle of Islam in the end of the fighting were killed-hard supporters of the Islamic State who flocked from all over the world.
A number of European countries have refused to take citizens who joined IS, putting additional strain on local authorities to deal with prisoners and patients.
"Children from the camp We currently have more than 70 babies being treated for malnutrition, "a nurse in the ward said.
She and other hospital staff declined to be named or for hospital, fearing reprisals for treating the children of IS fighters.
"Most cases were treated and then returned to the camp. A few have died We're doing the best possible but before the influx. "
More than 200 people have died on their way to al-Hol or after arriving in the camp in recent months, according to the International Rescue Committee. It said this week that around 30 to 50 cases per day were referred to local hospitals.
"We get 30 ambulances arriving each day," a local health official said, also declining to be named.
"There's help from international organizations for those from Baghouz They're mostly foreign. We can barely provide healthcare for our own. "
Those in critical need - mostly emaciated babies born in the wives of the Islamic State militants - are taken to the nearest hospital, a bumpy two-hour drive away. Other people found a waiting room with a tin roof in a growing queue for basic medical treatment.
At the hospital, staff had had two portacabins on the roof that served as a forhift ward for the treatment of malnourished children, crammed sometimes two or three to a cot.
Lower floors are loaded with teenagers and limbs and women with shrapnel and bullet wounds.
The exodus during intense fighting of more than 60,000 people from the Islamic State's final redoubt of Baghouz is the overwhelming medical staff in the Eastern Syria, which has been struggling to cope with the camp and ill-equipped hospitals.
Scores of people, mostly children, have died on the 150-mile (240-kilometer) journey to al-Hol or soon after arriving, help groups say
"My son has a dislocated hip. He needs an operation urgently, "said Umm Mohammed, a veiled 33-year-old woman holding an expressionless six-month-old boy at the camp.
"Medics keep saying they have more urgent cases to deal with - wounds and shrapnel injuries."
In the waiting area, dozens of people who mostly left Baghouz during a brief truce last month, arranged for civilians and surrendering militants to evacuate, wooden benches or concrete floors on sit. Children in wheelchairs watch while babies scream as they are bandaged or given injections.
U.S.-backed forces declared the defeat in the March of Islamic State's self-proclaimed caliphate - the territory it once held in Iraq and Syria - after militants were driven out of Baghouz village, where they lasted a month-long last stand.
The intense bombardment and fighting to dislodge the Sunni Islamist extremist group cost countless lives and the wounded many more people, including the wives of fighters, their children, IS supporters and other civilians trapped by the militants in the enclave.
Those who evacuated in recent weeks have strained healthcare in Kurdish-run areas of eastern Syria beyond capacity.
In the clinic at al-Hol, which is hosting more than 70,000 people displaced by violence, many people wore crude casts. One woman said that she did not have enough painkillers for a wound to her hand - a long metal rod from the explosion that wounded her and killed three relatives still her knuckle in lodged.
"I just want an X-ray at the hospital," she said, giving her name as Umm Ahmed.
STARVING CHILDREN OF ISLAMIC STATE
But local hospitals can take only the most severe cases
In one room at the hospital in the nearby town Hasaka, 19-year-old Baraa al-Kurdi, the wife of a Syrian Islamic State member, lay motionless next to a boy with third-degree burns covering his head.
"I was hit in the head by shrapnel," Kurdi said quietly. "We were next to a car packed with ammunition and explosives, including suicide belts.
"My husband was killed. My daughter is one month old - she's upstairs in the babies' ward. "
Kurdi's daughter was one of the few non-foreign infants in the ward.
Others, many blond or with Asian features, lay quietly in their cots with cheekbones showing and eyes sunken in their sockets from malnutrition. The patients' register listed the names their mothers gave the hospital - Ali Azerbaijani, Ali al-Uzbeki, Mohamed Skramo, a Norwegian name.
Many who stayed in the Battle of Islam in the end of the fighting were killed-hard supporters of the Islamic State who flocked from all over the world.
A number of European countries have refused to take citizens who joined IS, putting additional strain on local authorities to deal with prisoners and patients.
"Children from the camp We currently have more than 70 babies being treated for malnutrition, "a nurse in the ward said.
She and other hospital staff declined to be named or for hospital, fearing reprisals for treating the children of IS fighters.
"Most cases were treated and then returned to the camp. A few have died We're doing the best possible but before the influx. "
More than 200 people have died on their way to al-Hol or after arriving in the camp in recent months, according to the International Rescue Committee. It said this week that around 30 to 50 cases per day were referred to local hospitals.
"We get 30 ambulances arriving each day," a local health official said, also declining to be named.
"There's help from international organizations for those from Baghouz They're mostly foreign. We can barely provide healthcare for our own. "
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