Regime airstrikes on a school complex in northwestern Syria killed at least 35 people, including 16 children, according to the London-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, in what could be the deadliest attack yet on a school in the nation’s five-year war.
Seven women were also among the dead, and the death toll is expected to rise as dozens of others were injured in the Wednesday attacks — and many are in critical condition, the observatory’s director Rami Abdulrahman told CNN.
He said that jets hit the complex and the surrounding area in the village of Hass, in Idlib province, six times. The school had students from the first to ninth grade enrolled.
The observatory blamed the strikes on the regime, but it is difficult to distinguish between Syrian and Russian jets. Russia has been supporting President Bashar al-Assad’s regime with airstrikes since September 2015, and the two have been widely criticized for targeting civilians, and hospitals and schools in rebel-held areas.
The Syrian Civil Defense — a volunteer rescue group also known as the White Helmets — said that there were three schools in the complex, and shared photos on social media showing buildings reduced to rubble.
In an interview with the activist-run SMART News Agency, one of the rescuers said the strikes hits as students were leaving school. “At least 50 kids were in front of the school door and it was all strikes. You see here the strike hit right in the middle of the school,” he said.
“Such barbarity’
UNICEF, the UN agency for children, said that the strikes may amount to a war crime.
“It’s a tragedy. It’s an outrage. And if deliberate, it’s a war crime” UNICEF executive director Tony Lake said in a statement.
“This latest atrocity may be the deadliest attack on a school since the war began more than five years ago,” he said.
“When will the world’s revulsion at such barbarity be matched by insistence that this must stop?”
The Syrian Civil Defense — a volunteer rescue group also known as the White Helmets — said that there were three schools in the complex, and shared photos on social media showing buildings reduced to rubble.
Many hospitals and schools in Syria have been forced underground to avoid becoming targets of regime and Russian airstrikes, particularly in rebel-held eastern Aleppo.
A UN report in August found “sufficient evidence” that the regime had used chemical weapons on civilians, particularly barrel bombs laden with chlorine gas in Aleppo.
The Syrian government and Russia both deny the accusations.
‘Next generation is a lost generation’
The school strikes come as pressure mounts on the international community to find a solution to the war, even though talks are faltering between the US and Russia, major players in the conflict.
Attention in the fight against ISIS has also been diverted to Iraq in the past two weeks as a major operation got underway, involving a coalition of more than 100,000 people, to seize the city of Mosul from ISIS control.
Stephen O’Brien, the UN under-secretary-general for humanitarian affairs, gave a powerful speech to the UN Security Council Wednesday in New York, making a desperate plea for movement on a solution to Syria’s conflict.
He highlighted how children had been caught in the conflict’s crosshairs, especially in the city of Aleppo.
“Children in besieged eastern Aleppo were due to resume school in late September. They didn’t. Instead, shell-shocked children are retrieved from rubble and left writhing in bloody clothes on dirty hospital floors,” he said.
He said that across the country, one in four schools had shut down, more than 52,000 teachers had left their jobs and over two million children remained out of school. “And another 400,000 are at risk of dropping out as the horrors of this brutal and savage war continue unabated,” he said.
“What future do these children have — illiterate, orphaned, starved and maimed? What future does a country have when its next generation is a lost generation? These children do not have the luxury of waiting for another Geneva, Vienna or Lausanne to succeed. They need our protection now.”
US Defense: Offensive against ISIS in Raqqa ‘within weeks’
Despite the enormous offensive in Mosul, to which the US has dedicated hundreds of special forces, US Defense Secretary Ash Carter said Wednesday it would only be a matter of weeks before Washington and its allies were ready to drive ISIS from the Syrian city of Raqqa, the militant group’s symbolic capital.
The preparations come amid fears ISIS is plotting an attack somewhere around the world from inside the city.
The plan “has us generating those forces in a matter of weeks … generating them and positioning them for the isolation of Raqqa,” Carter said, without giving any further details.
“That’s what I’m going to say,” he said, adding, “And not many weeks.”
It has been “long planned” that the US-backed assault on Mosul — which started earlier this month — and Raqqa would be overlapping, Carter said.