France lashes Russia over Syria; Aleppo seeks EU help
BRUSSELS — French President Francois Hollande accused Russia on Thursday of reneging on its pledges in Syria, as a local leader in the besieged Syrian city of Aleppo appealed to Europe to send monitors to help ensure the safety of civilians being evacuated.
“I have been talking constantly to Russia, and Russia makes commitments that it is not keeping. Now it is time for us to conclude a cease-fire,” Hollande told reporters as he arrived in Brussels for a summit of European Union leaders.
“We can’t leave women, men and children to suffer bombing, have their safety threatened, be taken by force and treated in such an undignified manner,” he said. “The regimes that support (Syrian President) Bashar Assad will have to take responsibility for this extremely serious situation.”
Outside EU headquarters, the head of the local council of Aleppo, Brita Haj Hassan, warned that 50,000 civilians in eastern Aleppo “are about to be victims of a general massacre” by government troops.
