Acknowledged Rebel Attacks on Hospitals

In September 2012, the Free Syrian Army encountered mild controversy when they bombed two hospitals in Syria and didn't even bother blaming the government, taking credit themselves. These were apparently functioning hospitals, staffed, and treating the wounded.

These two episodes and any other hospital bombings will be explored below, along with any other acknowledged rebel attacks on hospitals that come to our attention,

Bombing of Al-Qusayr Hospital (Homs, Sept. 3)
Syrian rebels claim to have blown up a hospital in Al-Qusayr near Homs and uploaded videos of the deed.
 * This video names this as the al-Watani hospital. --Caustic Logic (talk) 13:00, 22 October 2013 (UTC)


 * The Telegraph reported Sept. 4
 * ''Amateur footage appears to show two huge explosions in the Syrian city of Homs, which purportedly took place on Monday. The rebel in the video can be heard saying: "Al Frouq brigade blew up the National hospital, which used to be for people, but now is being used by Assad's forces." ... The footage emerges as the governor of the Homs area says that the city has suffered an estimated $9 billion in destruction."

The video is shot from this rooftop.

Addounia TV in Syria had their own take:
 * 

A Russian documentary included footage ostensibly uploaded by rebels to show their preparations. They study maps, secure a massive bomb, dig a 500-meter tunnel underneath the hospital, and then detonate. From the look of this geyser of dirt filmed a half-mile away, no one in the hospital could have possibly survived.
 * 

Another video, apparently second-hand, shows the same explosion view and prior to it some apparent views of the planning.
 * 

Bombing Two Hospitals in Aleppo (Sept. 9)

 * Syria conflict: Aleppo car bomb 'kills 17'BBC News, Sept. 10
 * At least 17 people have been killed by a car bomb in Syria's largest city, Aleppo, state news agency Sana says. Syrian state TV said two hospitals and a school were largely destroyed by the blast near the city sports stadium. The Free Syrian Army said it carried out the attack because the facilities were being used by government troops. Earlier, a strike killed at least five people, witnesses said.


 * Simultaneous bombs hit army compounds in Aleppo (1:05)
 * Sept. 9, Deborah Lutterbeck reports. "Residents said the facilities were used to house soldiers fighting an 18-month uprising against Assad. A woman cries for her son who was killed in the blasts. The Free Syrian Army said in a statement that it carried out the Muncipal Stadium district attack, killing or wounding 200 troops. It said the bombs were planted inside the buildings in cooperation with a loyalist sympathiser."


 * http://www.wvuatv.com/content/wounded-flood-hospitals-syrias-largest-city
 * Two bombs exploded simultaneously on Sunday night next to Syrian army compounds in the northern city of Aleppo, killing and wounding scores of President Bashar al-Assad's forces, residents and opposition activists said. The bombs targeted makeshift barracks and the military police headquarters, situated in two adjacent sealed off districts in the centre of the city, said several residents and opposition campaigners from Aleppo.


 * The state news agency said an explosion near a hospital and a school in the Municipal Stadium district killed 17 people and wounded at least 40. Residents said the facilities were used to house soldiers fighting an 18-month uprising against Assad. "The army had taken over the neighborhood and emptied it from residents. The hospital was turned into army barracks," said activist Ahmad Saeed.

I cannot find active posting of this article: "Sep 11, 2012... It had been a calm day in Aleppo's Shifa Hospital, said Dr. Osman al-Haj Osman, his face etched with exhaustion from just three hours of ..."

National Hospital in Deraa (May, 2013)
[Syria attacks hospitals, denies healthcare as 'weapon of war': U.N A September, 2013 Reuters report]tells of a U.N. investigation into targeting of the healthcare system that put massive blame on government forces for "occupying" national hospitals, torturing patients inside them, attacking patients with sniper fire from them, and bombing free rebel field clinics, etc. In the flavor of the times, the report also blandly mentions some token rebel violations they didn't bother to screen and conceal like the others.
 * The U.N. team had details of a smaller number of incidents when rebel forces attacked hospitals (and never said otherwise - ed).
 * The Free Syrian Army attacked the National Hospital in Deraa in May 2013, apparently because 50 patients were believed to be linked to the government, according to the report.--Caustic Logic (talk) 13:00, 22 October 2013 (UTC)