The UN Security Council will hold an emergency meeting Wednesday on the humanitarian crisis unfolding in Aleppo, diplomats said.
The meeting will begin immediately following a Security Council session on the adoption of a resolution reinforcing sanctions against North Korea, which is scheduled to begin at 1400 GMT.
The 15 ambassadors of the Security Council will get a videoconference briefing on the situation in Aleppo by a UN official in charge of humanitarian operation and the UN mediator in Syria, Staffan de Mistura.
In east Aleppo, thousands of civilians have fled the fighting as the Syrian government forces advanced against parts of the militant-held areas.
The UN condemned on Tuesday the “descent into hell” being endured by civilians.
Up to 20,000 people have fled the regime offensive in the past 72 hours, the International Committee of the Red Cross said.
“France and its partners cannot remain silent in the face of what could be one of the biggest massacres of civilian population since World War II,” said France’s UN ambassador Francois Delattre on Tuesday.
He and his British counterpart Matthew Rycroft earlier in the day were pushing for the emergency council meeting on providing humanitarian relief to the besieged Syrian city.
Rycroft said the council would discuss plans for the UN to deliver much-needed food and medicine into Aleppo and evacuate the sick and wounded.
“Russia complained that the opposition had not agreed to this plan. Now they have, so I call on Russia to make sure the Syrian regime agrees,” Rycroft said.
“The future of Aleppo is in the hands of the regime and Russia, and we urge the regime and Russia to stop the bombing and let the aid go through.”
Earlier on Tuesday, Russian Defense Ministry said that the Syrian government forces have cleared half of eastern Aleppo from militants, liberating 80,000 residents.
“Most importantly, more than 80,000 Syrians have been liberated, tens of thousands children. Many received for the first time water, food, medical care from Russian humanitarian centers,” spokesman Maj. Gen. Igor Konashenkov said, according to Sputnik.
However, Western countries are exhibiting “surprising blindness” in their evaluation of the Syrian government troops’ ability to achieve progress in Aleppo, the ministry added.
Source: Agencies