BEIRUT: A maternity hospital supported by Save the Children was bombed on Friday in an air raid in Syria’s northwestern Idlib province, causing casualties and damage, the Britain-based charity said.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said a jihadist from Al-Nusra Front, which has changed its name to Jabhat Fateh al-Sham, was killed in the raid.

“Save the Children supported maternity hospital in #Idlib bombed, casualties reported — numbers unconfirmed,” the charity tweeted. It said the bomb hit the entrance to the hospital.

“This is the only hospital specialising in maternity and children in the northern western side of rural Idlib,” a statement said.

Alun McDonald, Save the Children regional media manager, said in a separate statement: “There are initial reports of some casualties among patients and staff, although numbers are so far unconfirmed.”

The Britain-based observatory, quoting local sources, said a jihadist was killed in the raid that struck the hospital in the rebel-held town of Kafar Takharim, leaving it heavily damaged and barely operational.

“It was him that was targeted. He went to visit his wife who had just given birth when the bombing happened,” said the monitoring group’s head, Rami Abdel Rahman.

Save The Children said the hospital is the biggest maternity facility in the area, serving over 1,300 women monthly and delivering up to 700 babies each month.

“The hospital has six incubators for premature babies, and an outpatient clinic for supporting pregnant women and providing after delivery care,” it said.

The observatory did not specify if the raid was carried out by Syrian regime aircraft or warplanes of its Russian allies.

Amnesty International said the strike “appears to be part of a despicable pattern of unlawful attacks deliberately targeting medical facilities” across Syria and a “potential war crime”.

“Deliberate attacks on hospitals and medical facilities are serious violations of the laws of war and can never be justified,” said Amnesty’s Philip Luther.

Published in Dawn, July 30th, 2016

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