In war zones, ambulances and hospital roofs are often clearly marked with a red cross or crescent to avoid accidental air strikes or other attacks. In Idlib, in the northwest of Syria, where the civil war has stretched into its eighth year, the UN has also shared the coordinates of medical facilities with Bashar al-Assad’s forces and their Russian allies in order to avoid inadvertent attacks.
Despite this deconfliction system, these hospitals have been repeatedly hit since the start of the current offensive in April. In northwest Syria, the US-based human rights group Physicians for Human Rights (PHR) received reports of 46 attacks on health care facilities — and confirmed 16 of them. At least 14 of these facilities were on the UN’s deconfliction list, according to several members of the UN Security Council in a formal diplomatic petition that was reviewed by Reuters.
No matter how much Russia and Syria try to deny their targeting civilians, given that this information was readily shared, it seems apparent that these are not accidents of war or inadvertent attacks.
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