Syria conflict: UN envoy calls on US and Russia to save talks Published duration 28 April 2016

media caption Staffan de Mistura warned that Syria's fragile ceasefire was "barely alive"

The UN envoy to Syria has urged the US and Russia to intervene "at the highest level" to save struggling peace talks.

Speaking after briefing the Security Council on the peace process, Staffan de Mistura said a partial truce agreed in February was "barely alive".

Violence in Syria has intensified in recent days, despite the ceasefire.

At least 20 civilians were reportedly killed on Wednesday in government strikes on a hospital and nearby residential building in eastern Aleppo.

The dead included children, a dentist and the only paediatrician left in rebel-held areas of the city, civil defence volunteers told AFP news agency.

media caption A doctor in Aleppo explains why he and his team must operate underground and in constant fear

Over the past week, more than 100 civilians have been killed in renewed bombardment by both rebel and government forces in Syria's largest city, according to the UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitoring group.

The upsurge in violence comes amid reports that the Syrian army, backed by Russian air power, is gearing up for a major offensive in Aleppo.

The escalation has threatened to derail the UN-brokered peace talks, which resumed last month.

The Western-backed opposition delegation, the High Negotiations Committee (HNC), last week suspended its role to protest against alleged ceasefire violations by the government and a fall in humanitarian aid deliveries to besieged areas.

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Speaking on Wednesday after a third round of talks in Geneva, Mr de Mistura said the fragile "cessation of hostilities" "could collapse any time".

He said that over the past 48 hours an average of one Syrian had been killed every 25 minutes and one wounded every 13 minutes.

image copyright AFP image caption One Syrian has been wounded every 13 minutes on average over the past 48 hours, the UN said

For the peace talks to succeed, Mr de Mistura said, hostilities would need to be reduced to the levels seen immediately following the February agreement.

Calling on the US and Russia to co-operate, he said the legacies of both President Barack Obama and President Vladimir Putin were linked to the success of the peace process in Syria.

There will be one or two more rounds of talks before July, Mr de Mistura said. He added: "There are still major differences on the major issues, but there is movement on certain areas where there was not before."

media caption Aleppo's destruction seen from above

Mr de Mistura also said that equal rights and equal representation in major institutions for women was essential to the transition to a new Syria.

The peace talks do not involve the al-Qaeda-linked al-Nusra front and the so-called Islamic State, which have been fighting government forces and other rebels across Syria.