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hospitals committing war crimes

Page history last edited by Kaisiris Tallini 1 year, 11 months ago

Hospital war crimes

 

Legal development: Cesidian law considering

legal disassociation from IHL conventions


What this hospital is doing is, and should be considered, a war crime:

 

Unvaccinated North Carolina man denied kidney transplant

https://nypost.com/2022/01/30/unvaccinated-north-carolina-man-denied-kidney-transplant

 

The duty of treating the wounded and sick, and the correlating protection of medical personnel and facilities, has been at the core of international humanitarian law (IHL) since its inception in 1864.

 

This principle was further enshrined in the Four Geneva Conventions of 1949, and the two additional Protocols of 1977.

 

The protection of medical services in war zones is also part of International Humanitarian Customary Rules, and is reflected in the domestic law, and in the military code of all countries around the world.

 

The Geneva Conventions stipulate the imperative to protect the wounded and sick, without discrimination, and in respect of the rules of medical ethics.

 

Under IHL, as soon as a person is wounded, they are protected, no matter how they were wounded, nor if they participated in hostilities on any side.

 

A combatant who is wounded, and ceases fighting, can no longer be considered a combatant.

 

The wounded must be collected and given medical care with the smallest delay possible.

 

Under IHL, medical personnel are obligated to treat all patients without discrimination.

 

Patients are not registered according to their ethnicity, politics, religion, or participation in prior hostilities.

 

They are triaged only according to their medical needs, and the urgency with which they need to be seen.

 

Withholding care, or providing care in a discriminatory fashion, is strictly prohibited, since it is a breach of medical ethics, as well as the Geneva Conventions, and can amount to a war crime.

 

This is the reason Cesidian law is now considering disassociating hospitals, or other large medical facilities, as deserving protection under Cesidian law.

 

Hospitals that discriminate or ration with medical care, especially in non-war circumstances, and for purely politically-based decisions, should not be afforded the protections they would normally enjoy under international humanitarian law (IHL).

 

Simply put, these hospitals are committing war crimes.

 

MT Kaisiris Tallini

 

 

Addendum: additional violation of international humanitarian law (IHL) posted on 02.05.2022:

 

Cleveland Clinic denies boy, 9, a kidney from naturally immune, healthy donor over status

https://www.worldtribune.com/cleveland-clinic-denies-boy-9-a-kidney-from-naturally-immune-healthy-donor-over-status/

 

 

 

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