'A very, very dark day': UN suspends Syria aid deliveries after airstrike
Activists say convoy was hit delivering aid west of Aleppo, Russians say it was only a cargo fire
The UN humanitarian aid agency suspended all convoys in Syria on Tuesday following deadly airstrikes on aid trucks the previous night that activists said killed at least 21 people, mostly truck drivers and Red Crescent workers.
The attack plunged Syria's U.S.-Russia-brokered ceasefire further into doubt. The Syrian military, just hours earlier, had declared the week-long truce had failed. The United States said it was prepared to extend the truce deal and Russia — after blaming rebels for the violations — suggested it could still be salvaged.
In Geneva, spokesman Jens Laerke of OCHA said further aid delivery would hold pending a review of the security situation in Syria in the aftermath of the airstrike. Laerke called it "a very,very dark day … for humanitarians across the world."
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The UN aid co-ordinator said the Syria government had granted needed authorizations in recent days to allow for aid convoys to proceed inside Syria. Humanitarian UN aid deliveries had stalled in recent weeks amid continued fighting, and the truce had not paved the way for expanded convoys as initially expected.
The confirmed death toll on Tuesday stood at one Syrian Arab Red Crescent (SARC) staff member and "around 20 civilians," the SARC and Red Cross said in a joint statement.
"If this callous attack is found to be a deliberate targeting of humanitarians, it would amount to a war crime,"