Syrian Ambassador in Moscow Blames U.S. for Hospital Strike
The Syrian ambassador to Moscow on Monday accused the United States of destroying a hospital backed by the humanitarian group MSF, amid U.S. accusations that Russian air strikes had targeted medical facilities in the war-torn country.
Riad Haddad, Syria's envoy to its ally Russia, told the state TV channel Rossiya 24 that the hospital in Idlib had been hit earlier in a U.S. raid.
"American warplanes destroyed it. Russian warplanes had nothing to do with any of it -- the information that has been gathered will completely back that up," Haddad said.
The United Nations said earlier that air strikes on at least five medical facilities and two schools in northern Syria's Aleppo and Idlib provinces, northwest Syria, killed nearly 50 civilians including children.
MSF (Medecins Sans Frontieres -- Doctors without Borders), which like the U.N. did not attribute blame, confirmed a hospital supported by the charity was hit in Idlib, and said seven people were killed and at least eight were missing, presumed dead.
The U.S. State Department, meanwhile, condemned air strikes that hit two civilian hospitals "in and around Aleppo," identifying them as one run by MSF, the Women's and Children's Hospital in the city of Aziz.
The statement did not mention Idlib specifically.
It said such action "casts doubt on Russia's willingness and/or ability to help bring to a stop the continued brutality of the Assad regime against its own people."
Haddad said U.S. accusations "are a sign of the war of propaganda, which began in the very first days of the conflict in Syria."