An airstrike in the northern Syrian province of Idlib destroyed a
makeshift clinic supported by an international aid group on Monday,
killing and wounding several people, activists and the group said. In
the neighboring Aleppo province, a missile struck a children's hospital
in the town of Azaz, killing at least five people and wounding dozens
on Monday. And in a nearby village, an air raid hit a school, killing
seven and wounding others.
Doctors Without Borders — also known by
its French acronym MSF — said in a statement that the hospital in the
town of Maaret al-Numan in Idlib province was hit with four times in at
least two attacks. It said the attacks were minutes apart, adding that
at least eight members of staff are currently missing.
"This
appears to be a deliberate attack on a health structure, and we condemn
this attack in the strongest possible terms," said Massimiliano
Rebaudengo, MSF's mission chief. "The destruction of the hospital leaves
the local population of around 40,000 people without access to medical
services in an active zone of conflict."
The aid group said the
hospital had 30 beds, 54 staff members, two operating theatres, an
outpatients department and an emergency room. The statement added that
MSF has been supporting the hospital since September and covered all its
needs, including providing medical supplies and running costs.
The
Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said Russian
warplanes targeted the makeshift hospital, destroying it and killing
nine people. The Observatory, which tracks the casualties in Syria's
five-year civil war, said dozens were also wounded in the attack. Over
the past week, Syrian troops have been on the offensive in the
country's north under the cover of Russian airstrikes. The ground
offensive has been focused on the northern province of Aleppo while
Monday's airstrike struck the clinic in the nearby Idlib province.
"The
entire building has collapsed on the ground," said opposition activist
Yahya al-Sobeih, speaking by telephone from Maaret al-Numan. He added
that five people were killed near the clinic and "all members of the
medical team inside are believed to be dead."
Paramedics and
volunteers were now working on removing the rubble, he added. The
four-story building once was a cement company but had served as a
makeshift clinic during the war, said al-Sobeih. In the missile
attack in Azaz near the Turkish border, five were killed at the hospital
and more than 30 were wounded, the Observatory said. Activist Bahaa
al-Halaby who is based in the northern city of Aleppo says it was a
ballistic missile adding that it killed 10. The Observatory said the
dead include three children and a pregnant woman.
In Turkey, the
private Dogan news agency reported that more than 30 of those wounded in
Russian air strikes in Azaz, primarily children, were transferred to a
hospital in southern Turkey. It showed footage of ambulances arriving at
the Kilis State hospital and medical personnel unloading children on
stretchers and a girl wrapped in a blanket as well as a handful of
adults
"They hit the school, they hit the school," wailed a Syrian woman who was unloaded from an ambulance onto a wheelchair.
The
Observatory and al-Halaby also reported an air raid on the village of
Kaljibrin near Azaz. Al-Halaby said the air raid hit a school, killing
seven and wounding others while the Observatory said five were killed. Meanwhile
in Brussels, European Union officials on Monday called on Turkey to
halt its military action in Syria after Turkish forces shelled positions
held by a U.S.-backed Kurdish militia over the weekend.
The EU's
foreign policy chief, Federica Mogherini, said that "only a few days
ago, all of us including Turkey, sitting around the table decided steps
to de-escalate and have a cessation of hostilities."
She said more fighting "is obviously not what we expect."
Dutch
Foreign Minister Bert Koenders, whose country holds the EU's rotating
presidency, said "we have the plan for a cessation of hostilities and I
think everybody has to abide by that."
Syria's main Kurdish
faction, the People's Protection Units, has been most effective in
combating the Islamic State group, but Turkey appears uneasy over the
group's recent gains.
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