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Hospital bombed in Daraa province — Activists

By AP - Jul 31,2016 - Last updated at Jul 31,2016

BEIRUT — An air strike on a hospital in an opposition-controlled town in southern Syria put the facility out of service on Sunday, while a senior UN official met with the Syrian foreign minister in the capital, Damascus, to push for the resumption of peace talks between the government and the opposition in late August.

The hospital in Jasem was targeted in one of several airstrikes to hit the town in Deraa province, located some 57 kilometres south of Damascus, according to the Local Coordination Committees activist network. The group said six people were killed in the strikes, blaming them on the government.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitoring group said the hospital strike killed a pharmacist and put the facility out of service.

Hospitals are regularly targeted in Syria’s war, drawing condemnation from the UN and the international community. The New York-based Physicians for Human Rights says over 90 per cent of attacks on medical facilities in Syria have been carried out by pro-government forces.

 

In Damascus, Ramzy Ramzy, the UN’s deputy special envoy for Syria, reiterated the United Nations’ intent to resume talks between the government and the opposition in late August, saying he discussed a political transition process with Foreign Minister Walid Moallem. The opposition has demanded that President Bashar Assad step down, after the harsh government crackdown on protests in 2011 sparked a catastrophic civil war.

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