BALADI NEWS
Attacks on civilian hospitals in Syria have intensified in recent weeks, as efforts to deescalate the conflict between the Syrian regime and rebel forces in Idlib province—the last remaining rebel stronghold—fall apart.
Such attacks are illegal under international law. But observers say the strategy is sometimes used to intimidate local populations—effectively making daily life untenable, forcing either a mass exodus or a surrender by the opposition.
The sometimes makeshift hospitals typically report their coordinate to the United Nations, which then shares those coordinates with all sides of the conflict. The expectation is that the warring parties will avoid bombing those areas.
But in the Syrian conflict, which has dragged on for more than eight years now, fighters have regularly targeted civilian hospitals. It’s such a dire problem, some hospitals have stopped reporting their coordinates and are now operating underground. Others, UN relief chief Mark Lowcock said in a briefing, have simply closed down.
Physicians for Human Rights (PHR), a nonprofit, has been tracking and verifying attacks on civilian hospitals in Syria since the conflict began. The organization has an interactive version of the below map on its website.