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US, Western leaders call for immediate Aleppo truce

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WASHINGTON—The United States and five other Western powers called yesterday for an immediate cease-fire in the Syrian city of Aleppo and accused Russia of blocking efforts to halt the bloodshed.

In a joint statement, the leaders of Britain, Germany, Italy, France, Canada and the United States demanded that Syria’s government address the humanitari­an crisis by allowing United Nations aid in to eastern Aleppo.

They said the United Nations should investigat­e reports of war crimes committed in Syria.

“We condemn the actions of the Syrian regime and its foreign backers, especially Russia, for their obstructio­n of humanitari­an aid,” the leaders said, adding that hospitals and schools appeared to have been targeted “in an attempt to wear people down.”

The display of diplomatic unity appeared intended to build support for a five-day ceasefire for eastern Aleppo that several Syrian rebel groups proposed on Wednesday in hopes of allowing civilians to flee, including the sick and wounded.

But White House press secretary Josh Earnest said the statement was not in response to any specific proposals.

Still, the calls for a pause in fighting have grown more urgent as Syrian government troops and their allies push deeper into Aleppo, forcing rebels to retreat and civilians to leave their homes.

Syria’s government and Russia rejected a previous cease-fire for Aleppo while continuing to try to oust rebels from the city.

The top US and Russian diplomats planned to discuss the crisis further during talks on Wednesday in Germany.

“Diplomacy has not delivered for the people of Aleppo, that’s for sure,” US Ambassador to the UN Samantha Power said on Wednesday in an Associated Press interview.

But she said the US would “never give up” on that approach. “It is not us that walked away from diplomacy. It is Syria and Russian Federation.”

The White House said the US was also considerin­g additional sanctions on those helping Syria’s government to try to up the pressure, but acknowledg­ed those penalties have thus far been ineffectiv­e. (AP)

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