Russia proposes 48-hour ‘humanitarian pause’ in Aleppo

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Moscow calls US threat to end talks over Aleppo push “emotional breakdown”, rejects Washington-backed seven-day truce.

A US threat to suspend talks on Syria over the bombardment of Aleppo’s rebel-held areas constitutes “an emotional breakdown”, according to a top Russian official, who says that Moscow will support a 48-hour “humanitarian pause” around the besieged city.

Sergei Ryabkov, Russia’s deputy foreign minister, rejected on Thursday US calls for a seven-day truce as “unacceptable”, but said a two-day ceasefire could allow desperately needed aid to reach the more than 250,000 civilians trapped in Aleppo.

The Syrian army announced last week an operation to retake the opposition-held east of Aleppo city following the collapse of a Russia-US orchestrated truce.

Al Jazeera’s Rory Challands, reporting from Moscow, said the Kremlin “saw the seven-day ceasefire as a step that would allow the terrorists, as they call them, to stock up on supplies and rest”.

“They [the Russians] say that the US is fixated on demands of a seven-day pause for reasons only they know,” our correspondent said.

“It seems after the negotiations that brought about the collapsed ceasefire – there is a widening gulf between the Russians and the Americans.”

Aleppo onslaught: Hospitals overwhelmed, few doctors left

Ryabkov’s comments followed a warning by US Secretary of State John Kerry that Washington would end talks on the conflict, as well as a military pact that involves targeting the ISIL and Jabhat Fateh al-Sham groups unless Moscow halted the assault on Aleppo.

Kerry conveyed the message in a call to Lavrov on Wednesday in which he voiced “grave concern” over the Russian-backed Syrian government’s air and land attacks on Aleppo that have left more than 400 people dead and at least 1,700 wounded  since last week.

Kerry said the US held Russia responsible for the use of incendiary and bunker buster bombs which put Aleppo civilians at great risk, according to John Kirby, spokesman for the State Department.

Kirby also said that Russia had an interest in stopping the violence in Syria because armed groups could exploit the vacuum there and launch attacks “against Russian interests, perhaps even Russian cities”, according to Reuters news agency.

READ MORE: Bodies litter floor at makeshift hospital in Aleppo

His statement drew a strong reaction from Moscow on Thursday, with Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov calling it clumsy and unhelpful.

Peskov also told reporters that the Russian air force would continue to support Syrian government troops and urged Washington to deliver on a pledge to separate moderate Syrian opposition fighters from “terrorists”

Hospital attacks

The Syrian government’s offensive to recapture all of Aleppo – with Russian air support and Iranian help on the ground – has been accompanied by bombing that residents have described as unprecedented in its ferocity.

On Wednesday, at least six civilians were killed when air strikes hit two hospitals in rebel-controlled parts of Aleppo.

The M10 and M2 hospitals were hit before dawn, forcing both to shut temporarily, and leaving just two of east Aleppo’s eight hospitals with surgical facilities.

Al Jazeera’s diplomatic editor James Bays asked Syria’s UN Ambassador Bashar Jaafari if his country had bombed the two hospitals. Jaafari walked away laughing without an answer.

“It’s not clear why he was laughing considering his country is being accused of war crimes in Aleppo,” Bays said.

An estimated 250,000 people still live in the east, which has been under near-continuous siege since mid-July, causing food and fuel shortages. Attacks on water installations from both sides have left more than two million civilians without water.

‘Opportunity to escape’

Meanwhile, the head of the White Helmets volunteer rescue force, which operates in opposition-held territory in northern Syria, said that under current conditions civilian facilities in eastern Aleppo would no longer be able to function within a month.

“The civilians there would seize any opportunity to escape, to go wherever they could go,” Raed Saleh told AFP news agency.

“But nothing is available to provide safety and protection for those civilians.”

The Syrian civil war started as a largely unarmed uprising against Assad in March 2011, but quickly escalated into a full-blown armed conflict.

Five years on, more than  400,000 Syrians are estimated  to have been killed, and almost 11 million Syrians – half the country’s prewar population – have been  displaced  from their homes.

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