UN skips blaming hospital raids on Russia
NEW YORK CITY: A UN board of inquiry formed last summer to investigate attacks on civilian establishments in Syria, including hospitals, has refrained from directly holding Russia responsible, according to a summary of its report obtained by AFP on Monday.
The coordinates of the sites had been communicated to the belligerents by the United Nations precisely to protect them from air strikes.
The summary noted that UN investigators were unable to visit the sites of the attacks because the Syrian government “did not respond to repeated requests for the issuance of visas to the members of the board”.
But, without mentioning Russia, the investigation concluded that in several cases studied by the board “the government of Syria and/or its allies had carried out the airstrike”.
In 2019, The New York Times published an exhaustive investigation, notably including recordings of Russian pilots, that directly incriminated Russia in attacks on hospitals in Syria.
Moscow, the Damascus regime’s main backer, has denied that its aircraft targeted civilian sites.
The summary was prepared by UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres on the basis of a 185-page confidential internal report, with 200 annexes. The roughly 20-page summary was submitted to the UN Security Council’s 15 members.
The UN investigation focused on seven air strikes, including one that was dropped from the report’s conclusions because the UN had not relayed the coordinates of that site to the belligerents, Mr Guterres said in a letter accompanying the summary.
The UN chief attributed the small number of incidents examined to the absence of UN personnel on the ground, which made it difficult to determine what had happened.
At the end of July 2019, 10 Security Council members issued a rare demarche — a formal diplomatic petition — demanding that Mr Guterres open an investigation into air strikes on medical installations, infuriating Russia.
The 10 were Germany, France, Belgium, Britain, the United States, Indonesia, Kuwait, Peru, Poland and the Dominican Republic.
The board of inquiry was established in September last year. Its report was supposed to have been submitted by the end of 2019, but was delayed until March 9.
Several countries and NGOs have argued that the air strikes on civilian targets in Syria should be prosecuted as war crimes.