UNITED NATIONS, May 28 (Xinhua) -- A United Nations official on Tuesday urged the international community to pay close attention to the dire humanitarian situation in Syria and take concrete action to stop attacks on schools and hospitals.
"Can't this Council take any concrete action when attacks on schools and hospitals have become a war tactic that no longer sparks outrage?" UN Deputy Emergency Relief Coordinator Ursula Mueller threw the hard-hitting question towards the Security Council, which was discussing the humanitarian situation in Syria.
"You know that more than half the Syrian population has either fled the country or faced repeated internal displacement...and you know that currently, an estimated 3 million people in Idlib are caught up in the crossfire, with some living under trees or plastic sheeting on bare patches of land," she said.
There are no safe schools or clinics, she said, and no way to earn a living, while families live in "the constant fear" of sending their children to a school that may be bombed "later that day," she added.
Despite a temporary ceasefire announcement on May 17, fighting in the last rebel stronghold of Idlib in Syria's northwest, has continued over recent days, with heavy shelling and aerial bombardment this month leaving more than 160 civilians dead and some 270,000 others displaced.
The deputy relief chief quoted the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights as saying that "both pro-government forces and non-state armed groups fighting in northern Syria appear to have failed to respect the principles of distinction and proportionality under international humanitarian law."
She told the Council that since April 28, the World Health Organization had reported a total of 25 attacks targeting medical infrastructure in northwestern Syria, including 22 health facilities, with some having been hit more than once. Moreover, some 25 schools are reported to have also been impacted by the violence, as well as marketplaces and at least three sites for displaced people.
While the humanitarian community is responding in accordance with its contingency and readiness plans, "despite our best efforts, the response is stretched," she said.
"Many of our humanitarian partners are part of the affected population and have themselves been displaced," she said, adding that as a result, "in many areas of active hostilities, humanitarian operations have been suspended," including health, nutrition and protection services that previously supported some 600,000 people.
Noting that this year marks the 70th anniversary of the Geneva Conventions and the 20th anniversary of the Council's adoption of protection of civilians as an agenda item, she recalled the secretary-general's words last week, saying that "respect today for international humanitarian law is, at best, questionable."
"You are all, as member states, aware that all parties to armed conflict are legally bound to comply with international humanitarian law...Sparing hospitals and schools is not optional. It is a fundamental legal obligation."
While calling the fighting in Idlib "the most distressing front in the conflict at present," she painted a picture of "deteriorating conditions" inside Rukban camp for internally displaced, on the southern border with Jordan, that during the past two months, have caused more than 13,100 to flee.
For those who remain, food, basic medicines and other life-saving supplies delivered in February have run out. Fuel is scarce; prices are skyrocketing; and "people are exhausted," she noted.
Mueller said a third humanitarian convoy to Rukban was urgently needed "to avoid further suffering" for the 29,000 people who remain, strongly urging the Syrian authorities "to reverse their refusal and facilitate access...as first requested in March and again on May 9...to provide support to this vulnerable population."
Turning to the continuing plight of some 74,000 civilians - 92 percent of whom are women and children - at the Al Hol refugee camp in the country's northeast, near the Iraqi border, she said that "most have been exposed to extreme violence and trauma under ISIL."
"They are now living in extremely difficult conditions where they face a range of protection challenges, and an uncertain and disconcerting fate," she said.