All hospitals in eastern Aleppo out of action
Monitoring group says some hospitals are running but residents are afraid to use them due to heavy shelling
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Beirut: All hospitals in Syria’s besieged rebel-held eastern Aleppo
are out of service after days of heavy air strikes, its health
directorate and the World Health Organisation (WHO) said on Friday, but a
war monitor said some were still working.
“This destruction of
infrastructure essential to life leaves the besieged, resolute people,
including all children and elderly men and women, without any health
facilities offering life-saving treatment ... leaving them to die,” said
Aleppo’s health directorate in a statement sent to Reuters by an
opposition official.
Elizabeth Hoff, the WHO representative in
Syria, said a UN-led group of aid agencies based over the border in
Turkey “confirmed today that all hospitals in eastern Aleppo are out of
service”. However, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a
Britain-based war monitor, said that some hospitals were still operating
in the besieged parts of Aleppo but that many residents were frightened
to use them because of heavy shelling.
Medical sources, residents
and rebels in eastern Aleppo say hospitals have been damaged by air
strikes and helicopter barrel bombs in recent days, including direct
hits on the buildings.
Health and rescue workers have previously
been able to bring damaged hospitals back into operation but a lack of
supplies is making that harder.
Intense air strikes have battered
eastern Aleppo since Tuesday when the Syrian army and its allies resumed
operations after a pause lasting weeks. They launched ground attacks
against insurgent positions on Friday.
Syrian state television said on Tuesday the air force had targeted “terrorist strongholds and supply depots” in Aleppo.
Russia
has said its air force is only conducting air strikes in other parts of
Syria. The Damascus government describes all the rebels fighting it as
terrorists.
Both countries have denied deliberately targeting
hospitals and other civilian infrastructure during the war, which began
in 2011 and was joined by Russia’s air force in September 2015.
The
war pits President Bashar Al Assad backed by Russia, Iran and Shiite
militias against a medley of Sunni rebels including groups supported by
the United States, Turkey and Gulf countries.
Aleppo, for years split between a rebel-held east and government-held western sector, has become the fiercest front.
During
the summer, pro-government forces managed to besiege the districts held
by insurgents which are home to about 270,000 people, according to the
United Nations.
An army offensive backed by a major aerial
bombardment from late September to late October killed hundreds,
according to the United Nations, and tightened the siege, leaving
eastern Aleppo with little food, medicine or fuel.
A rebel
counter-attack early this month involved shelling that killed dozens of
civilians, the UN said, but it quickly petered out and the army and its
allies, including Hezbollah and Iraqi militias, reversed all insurgent
gains in about two weeks.
Warplanes, artillery and helicopters
continued bombarding eastern Aleppo on Saturday, hitting many of its
densely populated residential districts, the Observatory said.
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