Wednesday, April 24, 2024 | Shawwal 14, 1445 H
scattered clouds
weather
OMAN
33°C / 33°C
EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

UN to investigate attacks on UN-supported facilities in Syria

1283437
1283437
minus
plus

UNITED NATIONS: The United Nations will investigate attacks on UN-supported facilities in northwest Syria, Secretary-General Antonio Guterres announced on Thursday, two days after two-thirds of the Security Council pushed for such an inquiry.


Britain, France, the United States, Germany, Belgium, Peru, Poland, Kuwait, the Dominican Republic and Indonesia delivered a demarche — a formal diplomatic petition — to Guterres on Tuesday over the lack of an inquiry into attacks on some 14 locations.


Meanwhile, Syrian soldiers have gained some ground in the country’s last rebel bastion during a Russian-backed offensive that aid agencies warn is growing bloodier.


The wave of violence in northwest Syria since late April has killed more than 400 civilians and forced more than 440,000 to flee towards the Turkish border, the UN said last week.


Syria’s army seized a handful of villages, fields and hills in the Hama countryside in the past two days, a military media unit for Hizbullah said on Thursday.


The region — including Idlib province and parts of nearby Hama — is part of the last major stronghold of armed opposition to President Bashar al Assad, who has vowed to reclaim all of Syria, though his side has not made major advances in this latest assault.


The Syrian army’s political chief pledged to seize Idlib if Russia, Assad’s key ally, does not reach a diplomatic solution with Turkey, long an opposition backer.


Air strikes by the Syrian government and its allies have hit schools, hospitals, markets and bakeries, UN human rights chief Michelle Bachelet said last week.


Bombing has escalated in the last four weeks, killing and wounding more people than at any time this year, the non-profit Doctors Without Borders said on Wednesday night.


At least 33 children were killed since the end of June, more than during all of 2018, the charity Save the Children said last week. “Bodies, some torn into pieces or burnt beyond recognition, are still being recovered from the rubble,” it said.


Major General Hasan Hasan, head of the Syrian army’s political bureau, said that “the military path to eliminate terrorism in the north is ongoing.”


He told the pro-government Al Watan newspaper that it would be good if Moscow or Tehran can find a solution through talks with Ankara, which has Turkish forces stationed in the northwest.


“But at the same time, when matters reach a dead end, then the Syria Arab Army which cleansed all these vast areas...will not stop at all, neither at Idlib nor at any area,” he said.


The dominant force in Idlib is Tahrir al Sham, the fighters formerly known as the Nusra Front, and factions backed by Turkey also have a presence in the region. — Reuters


SHARE ARTICLE
arrow up
home icon