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Breaking: UN suspends aid operations in Syria

Aids convoy to Syria

Aids convoy to Syria

The United Nations has suspended aid operations in Syria after a deadly attack on an aid convoy in rural Aleppo on Monday night, a UN spokesperson told CNN.

“At the moment (the) aid operation remains suspended while we assess and reevaluate the situation on the ground,” the spokesperson said.

An aid convoy carrying life-saving aid to 78,000 people was attacked near the Syrian city of Aleppo Monday, the United Nations and aid organizations said.

Officials from the UN and US said they were “disgusted” and “outraged” by the incident, which according to the UN saw 18 of the 31 trucks in an aid convoy hit.

Twelve people involved in the aid delivery were killed, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a UK-based organization that monitors the conflict in Syria.

No one has claimed responsibility for the attacks and it is unclear whether the convoy was hit by an airstrike or shelled.

The Syrian Civil Defense, a volunteer EMS service, posted video of the aftermath of the attack on social media claiming that aircraft had dropped four barrel bombs on the site of a Syrian Arab Red Crescent (SARC) aid warehouse, blaming the Syrian regime for the attacks.

CNN cannot confirm the authenticity of the video nor who was responsible for the attack.

The UN and International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), however, confirmed that the SARC warehouse had been struck. The convoy and the warehouse were both in the area of Urum al-Kubra, a reportedly rebel-held town west of Aleppo city.

The director of a SARC branch was among those killed in the attack, ICRC Middle East public relations officer Krista Armstrong told CNN.

Omar Barakat — the SARC’s director in Urum al-Kubra — was killed at the warehouse, she said.

The SOHR said at least 32 people in total were killed in separate attacks in Aleppo and its western suburbs on Monday.

The violence came just hours after Syrian authorities declared that a fragile ceasefire in the war-torn country was over.

Getting aid to areas cut off by fighting has been a growing concern for humanitarian agencies — with trucks destined for eastern Aleppo, where an estimated 250,000 civilians have been short of food, medicine and water, prevented from getting through.

“Our outrage at this attack is enormous,” said Staffan de Mistura, the UN’s special representative for Syria. “The convoy was the outcome of long process of permission and preparations to assist isolated civilians.”

Stephen O’Brien, the head of the UN’s relief organization, said he was “disgusted” by the reports and said if it’s discovered that aid workers were deliberately targeted, that the strike would amount to a war crime.

The State Department also said it was outraged by the reports: “The destination of this convoy was known to the Syrian regime and the Russian federation and yet these aid workers were killed in their attempt to provide relief to the Syrian people.”

Before news of the attack broke, neither the US nor Russia — the countries which brokered the pact — publicly said that the ceasefire is over.

Though the US State Department did not directly lay blame for the attack, it said in a statement that it was an “egregious violation” of the ceasefire and would force it to reassess whether it will continue to cooperate with Russia.

“For more than a week, we have urged Moscow to fulfill the commitments it made in Geneva to facilitate the unimpeded flow of humanitarian aid to the Syrian people,” the statement said.

“And for more than a week, the Syrian regime repeatedly denied entry to these UN convoys, preventing them from delivering urgent food, water and medical supplies to desperate Syrian citizens.”

The initial hope was that the ceasefire would help bring a much-needed calm to the country’s hotspots and that it would create a safe enough environment to deliver humanitarian aid to those in need.

Although the ceasefire appeared to initially reduce the amount of violence in hard-hit areas like Aleppo, the delivery of humanitarian aid was delayed for days due to security concerns.

The International Committee of the Red Cross announced Monday that its team had reached the city of Homs in western Syria.

Though there were minor violations to the ceasefire in the beginning, it appeared to be holding at first.

By Thursday, Russia and the United States were accusing each other of not fulfilling their respective obligations under the agreement.

And the SOHR reported civilian deaths from airstrikes in Idlib on Friday and in Aleppo on Sunday, though it didn’t identify the perpetrators.

The US conducted an airstrike on Syrian forces on Saturday — the Pentagon said it accidental and US officials expressed regret.

But Vitaly Churkin, Russia’s ambassador to the UN, called the strike “an extraordinary display of American heavy-handedness” on Saturday.

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