Talks between Kerry and Lavrov succeeded earlier this month in negotiating a cease-fire between Syrian government troops loyal to President Bashar al-Assad and rebel forces. That cease-fire collapsed after a week, following which a strike—blamed by independent observers on Syria and Russia—hit a humanitarian aid convoy, killing 20 people. Since then, Kerry and Lavrov have met face-to-face and spoken to implement another truce to allow the delivery of humanitarian supplies to the beleaguered rebel-held parts of Aleppo.

The diplomatic development comes as two hospitals run by Doctors Without Borders (MSF) in Aleppo were bombed.

Early morning bombings in #Syria's besieged eastern #Aleppo damaged 2 @MSF-supported hospitals and have put them out of service — أطباء بلا حدود سوريا (@MSF_Syria) September 28, 2016

The two hospitals had seen an increase in the number of patients since the collapse of the U.S.-Russia-brokered cease-fire. The hospitals received more than 270 dead and more than 800 wounded, according to MSF. The international aid organization says all eight remaining hospitals in eastern Aleppo have been damaged. Reuters reports 30 doctors are believed to remain in the eastern part of the city where 250,000 people remain.

“Many attacks are brushed off as mistakes committed in the fog of war,” Joanne Liu, MSF’s president, told the UN Security Council on Wednesday. “We reject the word ‘mistake.’”

Attacks against medical centers and humanitarian relief workers in Syria are hardly new. Last week, the UN temporarily suspended aid deliveries after the deadly bombing of the humanitarian convoy. The Syrian Civil Defense, a group of volunteer rescuers known commonly as the White Helmets, reported three of its four centers were also targeted in recent airstrikes.

Critics have described targeting of humanitarian convoys and medical facilities in Aleppo as war crimes. And while the United States and its allies have blamed Russia and Assad regime for such acts, both Moscow and Damascus have denied those claims.

While the international community continues to monitor the carnage in Aleppo, which has faced some of the most intense fighting since the civil war first began, the Syrian government has continued its attempts to promote a sense of normalcy in regime-controlled areas of the country. Earlier this month, the Syrian Tourism Ministry released a video inviting tourists to visit the country’s scenic beaches, without once mentioning the ongoing civil war. More recently, Syria’s state news agency tweeted a video depicting Aleppo’s “thriving nightlife.”

#Aleppo, now dubbed as the "World's Most Dangerous City", still boasts a thriving nightlife, as shown in one of this summer's events #Syria pic.twitter.com/kFUDtGvHME — SANA English (@SANA_English) September 24, 2016

Though the video, presumably filmed in the western part of the city that is government-controlled, provides a stark contrast to the carnage taking place mere miles away, the picturesque scenes of a city ravaged by a civil war may not be so far fetched. As the Washington Post’s Loveday Morris reported following a trip to government-controlled Aleppo in March:

War brings death and discomfort, but life continues here with a surprising degree of normality.



It’s a far cry from the images of Aleppo the world has seen during Syria’s war: the rubble-filled streets, the carcasses of buildings, lifeless bodies being dragged out of piles of detritus after airstrikes. But that is the rebel-held side.

Still, drone footage of eastern Aleppo taken after the recent increase in bombings paints a different picture: