SNHR: 17 Medical staff killed in Syria in May 2016

SNHR: 17 Medical, Civil Defense members killed in Syria in May 2016
A Civil Defense member killed in Aleppo by Assad regime airstrikes

The Syrian network for Human Rights (SNHR) published its monthly report documenting violations against medical cadres and the cadres of civil defense in May by the parties of conflict in Syria.

The report confirms that the Government forces is implicated in bombing and targeting of medical facilities, since 2011, as well as the armed conflict parties whose kill and arrest the medical and civil defense cadres, which indicates a systematic policy that only aims to kill more victims and deepens the suffering of the injured civilians and rebels.

The report indicates that Since the start of the cessation of hostilities agreement, various Syrian governorates witnessed a remarkable and well relative decline in the killing rate, compared with the previous months since March 2011, especially in the areas under the control of the armed opposition factions, but in spite of that, the violations did not stop, particularly by the Syrian regime and its allies targeting the medical vital centers and its cadres. Syria

The report said that after one day of the declaration of the Supreme Commission for negotiations to postpone its participation in the Geneva talks on 19 April, the governmental and Russian forces resumed bombardment of areas beyond the control of the Syrian regime to return the pace of killings to what it was before the cessation of hostilities agreement.

The report documents the killing of 17 medical cadres and civil defense in May 2016, distributed to 1 by the government forces, 12 by ISIL, 1 by armed opposition factions, and 3 by unidentified groups.

The report indicates the victims details, where a civil defense cadres killed by the government forces; while ISIS killed 2 doctors including a woman, 9 nurses, and one person from the medical cadres. The armed opposition factions killed one doctor; where the report documented the death of 3 nurses by unidentified groups.

The report adopted high methodology in documentation, through direct stories of survivors or the families of the victims, in addition to the operations of checking and analysis of photos, videos, and some medical records. It is also confirmed that all this documentation is not covering all cases; in the light of the ban and prosecution by the government forces and some other armed groups.

The report pointed out that the Syrian government blatantly violated both the International Humanitarian Law and Customary Humanitarian Law, particularly article 3 which is common to the Geneva Conventions and international humanitarian law. The Syrian government committed crimes considered to be war crimes targeting medical cadres and its working facilities, and committed crimes amounted to be against humanity.

The report demanded the International Security Council to take its legal and moral responsibilities toward what is happening in Syria at least for the right of the medical cadres and not stand silent amid the daily bloodshed.

Finally, the report recommended the global organizations to send volunteers to work in non-dangerous areas where patients are transferred, especially after the documented cases of death of many patients because of the deficit in the medical cadres.