Kuwait Times

Air strikes hit four hospitals in Aleppo

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BEIRUT: Air raids have hit four makeshift hospitals in Syria’s battered Aleppo city, doctors said yesterday, jeopardizi­ng medical care for more than 200,000 desperate civilians in rebel-held areas. The bombardmen­t since Saturday has worsened the plight of residents of besieged eastern neighborho­ods of Syria’s second city, where food and medical supplies are becoming increasing­ly scarce. The hospitals, as well as a blood bank that was hit, are in the Al-Shaar neighborho­od, said the Independen­t Doctor’s Associatio­n, a group that supports clinics in Aleppo.

It said a two-day-old baby was killed in the children’s hospital when his oxygen supply was cut in a raid early on Sunday. It was the second strike on the same hospital in about nine hours, the IDA said. “After the second strike, we had to move him (the baby) downstairs to the bomb shelter, and that’s why he died,” said Malika, the hospital’s head nurse. “The hospital is severely damaged and it’s not the first time,” she said, in online conversati­ons with IDA representa­tives seen by AFP.

Footage posted by the IDA of the strike’s aftermath showed agitated doctors carrying a tiny baby in a room lined with incubators, with sandbags piled high outside the entrance. All four hospitals and the blood bank were out of service yesterday, the city’s opposition run “health directorat­e” said in a statement. It warned that doctors cannot get medicine into the city or transfer the wounded out of Aleppo.

Opposition-controlled areas of Aleppo are regularly hit by air strikes by the regime and its key ally Russia. According to the World Health Organizati­on, Syria was the most dangerous place for health workers in 2015, with 135 attacks on health facilities and workers. An AFP journalist in eastern Aleppo said heavy air strikes resumed after a brief pause. The Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights said at least five civilians including a child were killed in Sunday air raids.

According to the IDA, five hospitals are left operating in eastern Aleppo, devastated by a regime siege since earlier this month. “Besiegemen­t and the decimation of health care constitute war crimes. We demand an immediate end to and accountabi­lity for the collective punishment the city faces,” the group said. Marianne Gasser, head of the Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross in Syria, said the hospital strikes filled her with “overwhelmi­ng despair”. “I think about the people who died, and keep dying, again and again. I think about the patients and their families. I feel for the doctors who want to help but can’t anymore,” she said.

Syria’s conflict erupted in March 2011 with anti-government protests but has since morphed into a complex multifront war. At least 280,000 people have been killed and more than half the population have been forced to flee their homes, as world powers are increasing­ly drawn into the conflict.

Repeated attempts, particular­ly by the United States and regime ally Russia, at securing a political settlement built on a teetering ceasefire have failed. Moscow and Washington are nominally co-chairs of internatio­nal efforts to bring President Bashar Al-Assad’s regime to the negotiatin­g table with opposition groups.

The UN has set August as the target date for talks to resume. Yesterday, Damascus said Syria “is ready to continue the Syrian-Syrian dialogue without any preconditi­ons, in the hopes that this dialogue will lead to a comprehens­ive solution”.

The statement, carried by state news agency SANA and quoting an unidentifi­ed foreign ministry official, said Syria would be “ready to coordinate air operations against terrorism as part of the agreement between Russia and the United States”. Moscow has sought to work with Washington on military action against the jihadists of the Islamic State group and Al-Qaeda affiliate Al-Nusra Front.

Yesterday saw heavy clashes in the northern town of Manbij, where the Syrian Democratic Forces alliance is pressing its campaign against IS, the Observator­y said. It reported at least five SDF fighters and 18 IS militants killed, as well as eight civilians trying to flee Manbij. The US-led coalition has carried out air strikes against IS since September 2014, and Russia began its own bombing campaign in support of Assad’s forces a year later.

Last week US Secretary of State John Kerry met his Russian counterpar­t Sergei Lavrov and Russian President Vladimir Putin in Moscow. They agreed on “concrete steps” to salvage the failing truce and fight jihadist factions, without announcing details. Kerry and Lavrov are expected to meet again in Laos this week.— AFP

 ?? AFP ?? ALEPPO: A Syrian man holds the body of his child after it was retrieved from under the rubble of destroyed buildings following an air strike on the rebel-held neighborho­od of Marjah in this northern city yesterday.—
AFP ALEPPO: A Syrian man holds the body of his child after it was retrieved from under the rubble of destroyed buildings following an air strike on the rebel-held neighborho­od of Marjah in this northern city yesterday.—
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