UN halts all aid deliveries after attack destroys 18 trucks in rebel-held northern Aleppo and kills at least 20 people.
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UN halts all aid deliveries after attack destroys 18 trucks in rebel-held northern Aleppo and kills at least 20 people.
Air strikes destroyed 18 lorries in a 31-truck aid convoy destined for rebel-held areas of Aleppo [Reuters]
Neither Russian nor Syrian planes bombed an aid convoy in
Syria's Aleppo, Moscow says, as outrage mounted over an attack the UN
said could be a war crime.
The Red Cross said on Tuesday at least 20 people were killed in
the attack on the trucks carrying desperately needed humanitarian
relief to thousands of Syrians.
"The air forces of Russia and Syria did not conduct any strikes
against the UN aid convoy in the southwestern outskirts of Aleppo,"
defence ministry spokesman Igor Konashenkov said in a statement carried
by Russian news agencies.
Konashenkov said the attack the previous night doesn't appear to have been from an air strike.
The Syrian Civil Defence, a volunteer rescue group known as the
White Helmets that operates in rebel-held areas, posted images of
several vehicles on fire. A video of the attack showed huge balls of
fire against the night sky as ambulances arrived on the scene.
Syria: Air raid hits aid convoy as ceasefire ends
The Russian military "carefully studied the video recordings of
the so-called activists from the scene and found no signs that any
munitions hit the convoy", Konashenkov said.
"Everything shown on the video is the direct consequence of the
cargo catching fire, and this began in a strange way simultaneously
with militants carrying out a massive offensive in Aleppo."
The United Nations has suspended all aid convoys to Syria following
the attack on aid trucks, which could amount to a "war crime", according
to UN official Jens Laerke.
Air raids rocked northern Syria's Aleppo province on Tuesday, hours after 18 lorries in the UN convoy were hit in the Uram al-Kubra west of Aleppo city.
A rescue worker who witnessed the convoy attack said more than
20 missiles pounded the area for hours, even hitting his team as they
searched the debris for survivors. Hussein Badawi, who leads the White Helmets in Uram al-Kubra, accused Syrian and Russian aircraft of taking part.
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, speaking at the UN General Assembly in New York, called those who attacked the convoy "cowards".
"Powerful patrons that keep feeding the war machine also have blood on their hands," Ban added.
The United States said it was unclear if it was a Russian or Syrian plane that hit the 31-truck UN aid convoy late on Monday, but officials placed the blame on Moscow, the key ally of embattled Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.
"The Americans are firmly blaming the Russians, saying they're not
reining in Damascus," Al Jazeera's Stephanie Dekker reported from
Gaziantep, on the Syrian border.
The convoy was part of a routine inter-agency dispatch operated by the Syrian Arab Red Crescent.
Following Monday's aid convoy strike, the UN said it was suspending
all convoy movement in Syria, and Peter Maurer, the International
Committee of the Red Cross president, said the attack could have
"serious repercussions" on humanitarian work in the country.
The new wave of bloodshed came after the Syrian army unilaterally
declared the end of a week-long truce brokered by the US and Moscow. The
government and the rebels traded blame over the collapse, each accusing
the other side of hundreds of breaches.
"If this callous attack is found to be a deliberate targeting of
humanitarians, it would amount to a war crime," said Stephen O'Brien,
the top UN humanitarian official, adding the warring parties had been
told about the aid convoy.
The Syrian Arab Red Crescent was also hit during Monday's strike, as was a warehouse run by the group.
SARC volunteers were among at least 28 civilians killed in the Aleppo
area in the first hours after violence resumed following the formal end
of the truce, according to the UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human
Rights.
The rebel-held area east of Aleppo city, home to some 300,000 people,
has been cut off from aid deliveries since July despite the ceasefire.
Ceasefire collapse
Ground battles between pro-government forces and rebel fighters raged
on Tuesday on the southwestern outskirts of Aleppo city near the
strategic Ramosa military complex, according to the Syrian Observatory,
as air raids pounded the northern province.
The ceasefire came into effect
on September 12. Under terms of the agreement, the successful
completion of seven days of calm and humanitarian aid deliveries would
be followed by an ambitious second-stage plan to set up a joint
US-Russian coordination centre to plan military strikes against the
Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) and a Jabhat Fateh al-Sham,
formerly the al-Qaeda-linked al-Nusra Front.
But from the start, the truce was beset by difficulties and mutual accusations of violations.
Source: Al Jazeera News And Agencies
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