A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Sunday, October 2, 2016
Biggest hospital in rebel-held Aleppo out of action after barrel bombing: Reports
Rebels
say water supplies are cut off from whole city as Russia is warned
against becoming 'international pariah' by backing offensive
Volunteers carry wounded person on stretcher after air strike on rebel-held area of Aleppo on Friday (AFP)
The biggest hospital in rebel-held Aleppo was hit by barrel bombs on
Saturday morning, activists reported, as Russian-backed Syrian forces
pressed an advance on the partly besieged city.
The M10, or Sakhour clinic, the largest medical facility still operating
in the besieged rebel-held east of the city, was pounded by four barrel
bombs and a so-called “bunker-buster” bomb on Saturday morning, the
opposition SMART news agency reported. The bombing knocked the hospital
out of service, the agency said.
SAMS radiologist and hospital administrator Mohammad Abu Rajab made an
urgent call for help on Saturday morning from inside M10. "The hospital
is being destroyed! SOS, everyone!" he said in an audio message
distributed to journalists.
The UN has warned that a humanitarian catastrophe is unfolding in Aleppo
unlike any witnessed so far in Syria's brutal five-year war, which has
claimed more than 300,000 lives.
The fighting came as the World Health Organisation said 338 civilians,
including 106 children, had been killed and 846 wounded in the past few
weeks in the city, which has suffered intense bombardment by the Syrian
and Russian air forces since the collapse of a ceasefire.
Air strikes on Saturday morning also cut off water supplies from the
whole city, the local rebel coordination office told Sky News Arabia.
Bunker-buster bombs, known in Arabic as “earthquake bombs,” are designed to penetrate targets buried deep underground.
The hospitals attack was confirmed by Adham Sahloul of the Syrian
American Medical Society (SAMS), which supports medical facilities
inside Aleppo.
Sahloul said a small group of patients and doctors "were inside the
hospital for basic triage, bandaging, and cleaning services for
emergency cases" when the bombardment began and remain trapped there.
Both M10 and the second-largest hospital in the area, M2, were
previously hit by heavy bombardment on Wednesday in strikes that UN
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon denounced as "war crimes".
A separate strike on Saturday morning destroyed a historic Armenian church in the Bustan al-Bashr distrct of east Aleppo.
The French foreign minister on Saturday condemned what he called the
"systematic targeting" of health workers, calling for an immediate
cessation of hostilities in the city.
"In the flood of violence that has overwhelmed Aleppo for several days,
the systematic targeting of structures and health workers is
particularly unjustifiable," Jean-Marc Ayrault said.
"This new attack only confirms the absolute urgency of a cessation of
hostilities in Aleppo and access for civilian populations to the
humanitarian assistance they desperately need," he said.
The city, once the second-largest in Syria, was rocked by artillery
exchanges throughout the night and into Saturday morning as government
forces pressed a two-pronged assault on rebel-held districts in the
east.
There have been mounting civilian casualties on both sides of the
divided city, with local news sites reporting that at least 31 people
were killed in the 24 hours to Saturday morning.
About 250,000 residents are living under a government siege in the
rebel-held east, and around 1.2 million face daily rocket fire by the
rebels on the government-held west.
Medical charity Doctors Without Borders has described the impact of Syrian and Russian bombardment of the east as a "bloodbath".
In the north of the city, meanwhile, residents of government-held areas
said they were relieved that the rebels were being pushed back, but
feared retaliation.
"We were happy when we heard about the army's advance," said Majed Abboud, a 32-year-old car dealer.
"But I'm afraid that with these ferocious clashes, there will be some kind of reaction from the armed groups," he said.
On both sides, at least 220 people have been killed since 22 September,
when the government began a ground offensive backed up by Russian and
Syrian air strikes, according to the British-based Syrian Observatory
for Human Rights.
The offensive, which may become the most decisive of the years-long
conflict, has seen the army win back territory in the north of Aleppo
that it had not held since 2013.
Troops have also pushed back the front line in the city centre, one
which had remained largely static since the rebels seized eastern
districts in 2012.
The civilian death toll has triggered mounting outrage against both the Syrian government and its Russian ally.
British Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson told Saturday's Sun newspaper
that Moscow risked becoming an international pariah by continuing to
back the offensive.