Less than a week after air strikes on a hospital in the Syrian battleground city of Aleppo killed at least 30 people, the council unanimously adopted a measure that strongly condemned the targeting of health facilities and recalled that such attacks are war crimes.
French Ambassador Francois Delattre described the measure as a "major resolution" that sent a strong message that there will be "no impunity for the authors of attacks perpetrated against medical installations and medical personnel."
It was the first-ever resolution adopted by the council specifically on the need to protect medical facilities in war zones.
According to Doctors Without Borders (MSF), there were 94 attacks in Syria against hospitals and clinics supported by that NGO and three MSF-managed or supported health facilities in Yemen have been bombed over the past six months.
Hospitals and clinics in South Sudan have been pillaged repeatedly over the past three years.
"Such attacks must end," UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon told the council.
"When so-called surgical strikes end up hitting surgical wards, something is deeply wrong."
The resolution was drafted by five non-permanent Security Council members: Egypt, Japan, Spain, New Zealand and Uruguay.
It was presented at a time when four of the five permanent council members -- Britain, France, Russia and the United States -- are backing parties in the Syria conflict.
The vote came days after the United States said its troops involved in the bombing of a MSF-run hospital in the Afghan city of Kunduz would not face war crimes charges.
