Syrian air force 'targeted' aid convoy in deadly bombing: UN probe

Syria's air force carried out the September 2016 raid that killed at least 10 aid workers in Aleppo province by deliberately targeting a humanitarian convoy, a U.N.-backed probe said on March 1.  

"Syrian air forces targeted a humanitarian aid convoy in Aleppo countryside," the United Nations Commission of Inquiry (COI) said referring to the Sept. 19, 2016 attack in Urem al-Kubra, adding that the raid "was meticulously planned and ruthlessly carried out," to destroy the aid.  

A separate U.N. investigation said in December last year that it was unable to establish blame for the bombing that forced aid groups to temporarily stop deliveries of life-saving relief.

The COI also said that all Syrian sides that fought in the battle for Aleppo committed war crimes and the deal to evacuate civilians following the rebel defeat was a "crime of forced displacement."

The COI for Syria documented violations including chemical attacks and civilian executions perpetrated during the Damascus regime's five-month siege of eastern Aleppo, which had been a key opposition stronghold.
 
From July 21, 2016 to Dec. 22, when government troops recaptured the city, the Syrian air force and its Russian ally "conducted daily air strikes" on Aleppo, the COI said.  

There is conclusive evidence that Syrian aircraft dropped "toxic industrial chemicals, including chlorine", but there is no information indicating the Russians used chemical weapons, the report said.

Meanwhile, Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Gennady Gatilov said on Feb. 28 that a U.N. Security Council resolution put forward by Western powers to punish Syria's government over its alleged use of chemical weapons would harm peace talks in Geneva.

The resolution,...

Continue reading on: