Children from Gaza arrive in Rome for medical treatment

Children from Gaza arrive in Rome for medical treatment A child from Gaza receives a visit from Tiziano Onesti, president of the Vatican-owned Bambino Gesù hospital in Rome, Issa Kassissieh, the Palestinian ambassador to the Holy See, and Franciscan Father Ibrahim Faltas, vicar of the Custody of the Holy Land, in the hospital Jan. 30, 2024. The child is one of 11 young people airlifted to Rome Jan. 29 for medical treatment in Italy. (CNS photo/Courtesy Bambino Gesù hospital)

Ten children from Gaza in need of medical attention arrived in Rome on a military plane late January 29, the first group of young patients who will receive treatment in Italy thanks to the lobbying of the Franciscan Custody of the Holy Land and negotiations involving the governments of Italy, Israel, Palestine and Egypt.

The 10 children and a young man, described as being just over 18 years old, were taken from Rome’s Ciampino military airport to the Vatican-run Bambino Gesù paediatric hospital for an initial assessment, Vatican News reported.

The patients include children seriously injured in the ongoing war between Israel and Hamas as well as chronically ill children who can no longer receive the necessary treatment in Gaza because of the war.

Four of the patients will stay at Bambino Gesù while the young man will be treated at St Camillus Hospital in Rome and the other children will be cared for at hospitals in Genoa, Bologna and Florence.

The flight was met at Ciampino airport by Fr Ibrahim Faltas, vicar of the Franciscan Custody of the Holy Land, along with Italy’s foreign minister and the army general who coordinated the airlift.

Awaiting the arrival of the plane, Vatican News said, “Fr Faltas did not hold back his emotion at what he described to the Vatican Media as ‘a first sign of peace. Peace that needs listening and humility’”.

Gen. Francesco Figliuolo, head of the interforce coordinating team, told reporters at the airport that the Italian government and armed forces studied the possibility of setting up a field hospital in Gaza, but the security situation made that impossible.

The first group of patients, and the parents or guardians accompanying them, crossed from Gaza into Egypt at the Rafah crossing and were taken to a hospital in Cairo in preparation for the flight.

Initial plans are for 100 Palestinian children, who are in dire need of medical care that cannot be provided in Gaza, to be brought to Italy. The Italian military hospital ship, Vulcano, set sail January 31 with another 50 to 60 children and their guardians. Another airlift is expected in February.