Battle
for Aleppo: US-Backed Rebels Shut Off Water for 1.5 Million
Civilians
The so-called "moderate" rebels turned off the water to 1.5 million civilians living in West Aleppo in retaliation for a Syrian Army airstrike on East Aleppo that allegedly left 250,000 residents without water setting the stage for an unprecedented humanitarian catastrophe.
The so-called "moderate" rebels turned off the water to 1.5 million civilians living in West Aleppo in retaliation for a Syrian Army airstrike on East Aleppo that allegedly left 250,000 residents without water setting the stage for an unprecedented humanitarian catastrophe.
25
September, 2016
The
city of Aleppo is “dying” according to United Nations
officials after a fierce wave of bombing last night by the
Syrian Army in an attempt to break the stalemate in what
once was the economic capital of the country but is now
left to rubble after years of combat between the
Assad government and rebels.
Last
night’s airstrikes according to early reporting by the
United Nations left 115 dead as hostilities have intensified
following the collapse of the ceasefire earlier this week
resulting in large part from a US-led coalition airstrike
on a Syrian Army base in Deir Ez-Zor that left 62 dead and
hundreds injured "paving the way" for a major
offensive by Daesh (ISIS) terrorists and over 300 ceasefire
violations by the rebels.
The rebels signaled in the day
before the ceasefire that they would not comply with the
agreement brokered by the United States and Russia with the
second largest rebel group Ahrar al-Sham even saying that it was
“impossible” for the group to breakaway from al-Nusra
Front terrorists (formerly Syria’s al-Qaeda affiliate prior to a
rebranding effort) because the two groups had become too entangled
fighting under the common banner of the Army of Conquest.
With hopes for peace on hold Syrian airstrikes have
escalated which the rebels claim undermined attempts to repair a
water pump supplying rebel-held districts in East Aleppo
with water allegedly blocking the flow of the vital
resource to some 250,000 residents.
n an act of reprisal,
the rebels switched off the Suleiman al-Halabi pumping station
that provides water to 1.5 million Syrian civilians
in government controlled West Aleppo raising the possibility
of an unprecedented humanitarian crisis in what has already
turned into the largest displacement of civilians in human
history.
Kieran Dwyer, spokesman for the UN Children’s Rights
& Emergency Relief Organization (UNICEF) explained that the Bab
al-Nairab pumping station supplying rebel-held parts of Aleppo
was allegedly damaged on Thursday and subsequent strikes
rendered repairs impossible.
"Then in retaliation for that
attack a nearby pumping station that pumps water to the entire
western part of the city – upwards to 1.5 million people
– was deliberately switched off," said Dwyer.
UNICEF fears that families in West Aleppo will be forced
to use contaminated liquid carrying waterborne diseases to which
children are particularly vulnerable as a result of the
intentional act of terroristic sabotage by the rebels
in contravention of international humanitarian standards.
"Aleppo is slowly dying, and the world is watching, and the
water is being cut off and bombed – it’s just the latest act
of inhumanity," said UNICEF Deputy
West
still arming Al-Nusra in Syria, peace almost impossible – Russia’s
UN envoy
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.