Less than a week after air strikes on a
hospital in the Syrian battleground city of Aleppo killed at least 30
people, the council unanimously adopted the measure that strongly
condemned the targeting of health facilities and recalled that such
attacks are war crimes.
French Ambassador Francois Delattre said it
was a "major resolution" that sent a strong warning that there can be
"no impunity" for the perpetrators of attacks on medical facilities.
The resolution does not break any new legal
ground but British Ambassador Matthew Rycroft stressed that it was
"shining a spotlight" on the increase in attacks and serves as a
reminder that hospitals, ambulances and medical workers cannot be
targets in war.
It was the first-ever resolution adopted by the council specifically on the need to protect medical facilities in war zones.
According to Doctors Without Borders (MSF),
there were 94 attacks in Syria against hospitals and clinics supported
by that NGO and three MSF-linked health facilities in Yemen have been
bombed over the past six months.
Hospitals and clinics in South Sudan have been pillaged repeatedly over the past three years.
"Hospitals and patients have been dragged onto
the battlefield," MSF president Joanne Liu told the council. "Stop
these attacks", she pleaded. "Make this resolution save lives."
'SOMETHING IS DEEPLY WRONG'
The resolution does not name countries, but
"demands that all parties to armed conflicts" ensure "the respect and
protection" of medical personnel as well as their ambulances, hospitals
and other health facilities.
"Such attacks must end," UN Secretary-General
Ban Ki-moon told the council. "When so-called surgical strikes end up
hitting surgical wards, something is deeply wrong."
The resolution was drafted by five non-permanent Security Council members: Egypt, Japan, Spain, New Zealand and Uruguay.
It was presented at a time when four of the
five permanent council members - Britain, France, Russia and the United
States - are backing parties in the Syria conflict.
Syria's state media reported that rebel fire
on a hospital in the government-controlled area of Aleppo had killed
three women and wounded another 17 on Tuesday.
The vote came days after the United States
said its troops involved in the bombing of a MSF-run hospital in the
Afghan city of Kunduz would not face war crimes charges.
"Humanity in war is what we demand," Peter
Maurer, president of the International Committee of the Red Cross, told
the council. "Even wars have limits, because wars without limits are
wars without ends. Health care personnel are the outer frontier of these
limits," he said.
The resolution requests that Ban present
recommendations on measures to prevent attacks and to ensure that those
who carry them out are held accountable.
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