| Aleppo bombings (April–July 2016) | |
|---|---|
| Part of theBattle of Aleppo (2012–2016) | |
| Location | 36°13′N37°10′E / 36.217°N 37.167°E /36.217; 37.167 Aleppo,Syria |
| Date | 22 April – 18 July 2016 (2 months, 3 weeks and 5 days) |
| Target | Military and civilians |
Attack type | Airstrikes andbombardments |
| Weapons | Aerial bombs,rockets,artillery andchemical weapons |
| Deaths | |
| Perpetrators | |
TheAleppo bombings (April–July 2016) were intensebombardments on both rebel and government-held areas in the city ofAleppo,Syria starting in late April 2016. Some rebel shelling also hit a Kurdish-held part of the city. The bombings decreased in intensity after 55 days when a temporary truce was established.[3] However, the bombings continued through July.[1]
On 27 April 2016, four consecutive airstrikes in an opposition-held district of Aleppo hit and destroyed al-Quds hospital and nearby homes.[4] Witnesses said a missile from a low-flying fighter jet hit the hospital directly.[5] TheSyrian Observatory for Human Rights said at least 27 people were killed.[4]Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) helped to support the hospital and initially said 14 patients and medical staff were killed.[4] On 4 May 2016, MSF released a statement saying the death toll had risen to 55 after more bodies were found.[6] According to MSF, the pediatric unit of the hospital was almost completely destroyed and the emergency room and laboratory were both entirely destroyed.[6] MSF said the hospital would not be able to reopen for at least two weeks.[6]
NPR reported that Russia and the Syrian government were the only two groups with aircraft in the area.[5] According to aUS State Department official, there were indications the Syrian government solely conducted the bombing of the hospital.[7]The Guardian reported that the attack was "part of a broader pattern of systematic targeting of hospitals by the government ofBashar al-Assad".[8] No one claimed responsibility for the airstrike.[5]
On 29 April, the Malla Khan mosque in a government-controlled neighborhood was hit by rockets, killing at least 15 people. The Syrian government reported that theSyrian rebels are behind the attack.[9]
On 3 May, the Syrian rebels fired rockets at government territory and killed 19 people. The rockets hit a hospital and killed 3 and wounded 17, according to government sources.[10]
On 2 August, Russia claimed that theNour al-Din al-Zenki Movement bombed with chemical weapons the government held areas of Aleppo, inflicting losses in civilian population.[2]