| 19 Décembre 2016
16 December 2016, GENEVA - The World Health  Organization is calling for medical evacuation of the sick and injured  from east Aleppo to be resumed as quickly as possible. Almost 200  patients were safely transferred to hospitals in western rural Aleppo,  Idlib and Turkey before all evacuations were aborted this morning,  leaving many more in need of medical care stranded. “The medical evacuation has only been underway for 24 hours, and there  are still large numbers of women, infants and children under five  amongst those who need medical care,” says WHO Syria Representative,  Elizabeth Hoff in Aleppo. “They had to leave the collection area and  return to their houses. We hope that the evacuation will resume  promptly.”
 
 WHO has been supporting the medical evacuation, together with ICRC and  the Syrian Arab Red Crescent. The Organization’s staff was told this  morning that the operation has been aborted and they should leave the  area.
 
 The medical evacuation is being managed with the WHO field presence in  Gaziantep, Turkey, from which 113 ambulances as well as 17 mobile teams  have been deployed and coordinated. Eight hospitals in western rural  Aleppo, Idlib, as well as hospitals in Turkey, are treating the medical  evacuees, the majority of whom are suffering from trauma injuries.  Medical supplies sufficient for more than 279 000 treatments and 6000  surgeries have been provided by WHO to ensure evacuees can receive the  level of care they need.
 
 “By 7 this morning 194 evacuated patients had arrived at hospitals. Of  these, 71 are being treated in Turkey - many of them for war wounds  including brain and eye damage. Others are being given urgently needed  help for chronic diseases such as diabetes that have been left untreated  during the siege. But there are many more left behind with critical  needs,” said Dr Pavel Ursu, WHO Turkey Representative.
 
 WHO, together with the rest of the UN and its partners are calling on  all parties to the conflict to resume the evacuation of the injured and  sick patients who are trapped in eastern Aleppo and to ensure the safety  of all health workers.