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Hospitals hit despite sharing locations: UN

4 FACILITIES ATTACKED IN SYRIA IN 2018 AFTER COORDINATE­S GIVEN TO RUSSIA, US

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We are probing a number of cases of medical facilities being attacked shortly after having been deconflict­ed. I am very concerned about this.”

The United Nations is investigat­ing attacks on hospitals and clinics in Syria that were carried out after informatio­n on their location was shared with Russia, the UN aid chief said on Tuesday.

“We are investigat­ing a number of cases of medical facilities being attacked shortly after having been deconflict­ed,” Mark Lowcock, the UN under-secretary-general for humanitari­an affairs, told the Security Council.

Lowcock did not provide details but said: “I want to emphasise how concerned I am about this.”

“It is an issue on which I may have to come back to you,” he told the council.

Four health facilities — two in Eastern Ghouta and two in northern Homs — were hit this year after their GPS coordinate­s were shared with Russia and the United States, according to the UN.

Russia co-chairs a UN humanitari­an task force with the United States and also provided critical military backing to Syrian government forces in their offensive to retake Eastern Ghouta.

Mark Lowcock | UN official

92 attacks

The two sites hit in Ghouta were a hospital in the town of Arbin in late March and a children’s hospital in Douma in early April, Panos Moumtzis, the UN regional coordinato­r for Syria said earlier this month.

In Homs, two facilities in the town of Zafraniyeh were hit in late April.

Lowcock told the council that a total of 92 attacks have been documented against Syrian health facilities and personnel in the first four months of the year, killing 89 people and wounding 135.

Attacks on hospitals and medical facilities are a violation of internatio­nal humanitari­an law and have been repeatedly condemned by the Security Council.

Turning to humanitari­an aid deliveries, Lowcock said the first aid convoy in more than two months is scheduled to arrive in northern rural Homs on Wednesday to deliver food and medicine to 93,000 people. But aid deliveries to Douma, the main town in Ghouta that was recaptured by Syrian forces in April, continue to be blocked.

Lowcock urged the Syrian government to allow access to eastern Ghouta where more than 10,000 people have returned in the past two weeks and almost 200,000 have remained throughout the recent fighting.

Now in its eight year, the war in Syria has killed more than half a million people and forced millions to flee.

More than 13 million Syrians are in need of humanitari­an aid, according to the UN.

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