Strip - Hallways filled with screaming voices. A terrible stench in the air. Wounded people streaming through the doors. Lifeless bodies and bags of body parts arriving in bedsheets.
“It's almost as bad as it gets,” Brennan said. “It's not just the damage, the destruction. It's that psychological pressure. The constant shelling ... the loss of one's colleagues.” From the hospital corridor, Muhammad Al-Gharabli recalled four missiles crashing into a mosque in the seaside Shati refugee camp Monday, decapitating his 2-year-old son, Mohammed, and sending shrapnel into the leg of his 5-year-old son, Lotfi.