A UN inquiry into a series of regime and Russian attacks on UN-supported facilities in northwestern Syrias Idlib province will begin this month’s end, the international body announced Friday, according to the Anadolu news agency. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres initiated the review at the behest of the ambassadors of the US, UK, France, Belgium, the Dominican Republic, Germany, Indonesia, Kuwait, Peru and Poland who urged him to look into attacks on medical facilities and possible abuse of the UNs deconfliction channel. The investigation will be led by Nigerian Lt. Gen. Chikadibia Obiakor. "The Board will review and investigate a number of specific incidents in which there was destruction of, or damage to, facilities on the UN deconfliction list and UN-supported facilities in the area," Stephane Dujarric, Guterres spokesman, said in a statement. Peruvian Maj. Gen, Fernando Ordonez, and former International Committee of the Red Cross official Pierre Ryter will assist in the probe. The board will begin its work September 30, and "will ascertain the facts of the specific incidents concerned and report to the Secretary-General once it completes its work," Dujarric said. Guterres "urges all parties concerned to extend their full cooperation to the Board," he added. Russia, China and the councils non-permanent African countries did not join in the appeal to form the inquiry. At the time of the request Human Rights Watch offered strong support for the inquiry, saying the UN provided Russia, the regime and other parties with "coordinates of hospitals in Idlib to ensure their safety." "Yet time and again, those life-saving facilities have been bombed," Louis Charbonneau, the rights organization’s UN director, said in a statement. Mark Lowcock, the UNs humanitarian affairs coordinator, told the Security Council last month that the regimes more than three-month offensive in northwest Syria has left at least 17 villages in southern Idlib not only decimated but "emptied" as well. "What you see is a level of destruction consistent with a bombing campaign aimed at a scorched earth policy," he said at the time.
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