Donation-based hospital rescues Afghanistan's wounded
By Clarissa Ward
December 13, 2012
(CBS News) KABUL - In Afghanistan, an American soldier and two Afghans were killed by a car bomb Thursday.
It happened near the U.S. airbase in Kandahar, a few hours after Defense Secretary Leon Panetta left there to meet with Afghan President Karzai.
Taliban attacks have grown more frequent, causing a sharp rise in civilian casualties. There's one place where many of those lives are saved or lost.
The non-profit trauma hospital goes by one name: Emergency. It offers free treatment to the bruised and bloodied victims of this conflict. Every patient who arrives there is a casualty of war.
Dr. Gino Strada is the chain-smoking Italian cardiologist who founded emergency in 1999. He told CBS News that he'll take in patients, regardless of whether they're Taliban or whatever their political affiliations may be.
"Otherwise, you're not a doctor anymore," he said, "then you're a judge."
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