Yes, to give you an anecdote in a way, when I was researching the book I wrote of survivors' stories on the end of the civil war, I knew that hospitals at that point had been hit, but I had rather assumed, naively, that they were hit accidentally, through carelessness. When I met one of the doctors who had escaped out of the country, he told me that he'd given the GPS locations to the ICRC, which passed it on to the military. These were protected humanitarian sites that had been hit within days or hours of handing over those locations. He said, I think, it was nine that he'd handed over the locations for, and an additional five, he never gave the locations for and they were not hit.
He concluded that they were being deliberately targeted. That is something I personally found very difficult to accept at first until I found so much evidence for it from people who were in the hospitals, people who were volunteers, patients. A huge number of people said, “If you're injured, don't go to the hospital unless it's desperate. First of all, they don't have medicine and they can't help you, and secondly, you're much more likely to be hit if you're in a hospital.”
That was the common wisdom at the time, so nobody has been held accountable for repeated, deliberate targeting of hospitals, and not just hospitals, but food queues, humanitarian sites of refugee areas, food distribution points. Some of the worst stories you hear from people who have survived that period are about the shelling of milk queues, queues where pregnant mothers or mothers of very young babies stood waiting for rations of milk powder because there was no milk in that area. Milk powder was more precious than gold, and they had to have milk powder. Many of the women stopped being able to breastfeed because they were so starved. The injuries that the doctor talked about from those shellings of milk queues were horrific because there were a lot of dead, pregnant women, and small babies were being hurt.