"There are cases where medical kits, surgical kits, are removed. What it means is that on the other side, a wounded man, woman or child could die," Georgieva told reporters.
"It is a war crime to remove
surgical kits from a convoy, or to prevent help getting in, or, what is
even worse, to target medical facilities and bomb them, to shoot at
doctors," Georgieva said in Geneva, where US Secretary of State John
Kerry and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov were to hold talks
later Thursday on efforts to control Syria's chemical weapons.
"Thirty-one humanitarian workers have lost their lives. Turning a
blind eye to a violation of international humanitarian law is a war
crime too," she added.She said fewer than half of the eight million Syrians who need aid received it on a regular basis, as the civil war that has claimed more than 100,000 lives and driven two million refugees abroad shows no sign of abating.
Georgieva said she hoped the Kerry-Lavrov talks would enable a broader breakthrough, but insisted a toughly worded UN resolution was needed.
"For the first time in this horrible conflict, the international community is coming together in the face of the great danger of the use of chemical weapons," she said.
"But if we don't have a condemnation of violations of international humanitarian law in this conflict, what are we telling bad people elsewhere? That we can turn a blind eye at what you do?"
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