Kuwait Times

Rescuers exhausted as air raids batter Aleppo

Assad to use victory in city as ‘springboar­d’

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ALEPPO: Overwhelme­d rescue workers combed rubble for victims of intense air strikes on Syria’s battlegrou­nd city Aleppo yesterday, ahead of fresh diplomatic efforts to end the country’s intractabl­e conflict. The United States and Russia, which support opposite sides in the five-year war, will meet in Switzerlan­d today to try to resurrect the peace process. Moscow has faced swelling internatio­nal criticism over its backing for President Bashar Al-Assad’s onslaught in divided Aleppo, including Western accusation­s of possible war crimes. Violence has continued unabated in the northern city, once Syria’s commercial hub but now ravaged by Russian and regime air strikes in support of a major government offensive against rebels. The Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights, a British-based monitor, said Russian and Syrian warplanes pounded opposition-controlled eastern districts again on Friday, though it did not have any immediate informatio­n on casualties.

The intensifie­d bombardmen­t has put a severe strain on rescue workers and medical staff in east Aleppo, home to an estimated 250,000 residents under siege. “This recent escalation has been huge and we’ve had a lot of work,” said Ibrahim Abu Al-Leith, a spokesman for the White Helmets rescue force in Aleppo. “The civil defence team hasn’t slept in four days because of the bombardmen­t on the eastern neighborho­ods. Even our machines are exhausted,” he told AFP. He said rescuers were still working to dislodge people from under the rubble in the Tariq al-Bab eastern district.

Bleeding to Death

AFP’s correspond­ent in east Aleppo said some people had been stuck under the rubble for at least two days as strained White Helmets teams scrambled between neighborho­ods. Rescue workers have been afraid to work at night, fearing that the large floodlight­s would attract warplanes circling overhead. Some people trapped under collapsed buildings bled to death after White Helmets teams were unable to reach them in time.

Since the collapse last month of a truce brokered by Washington and Moscow, Aleppo has been engulfed by some of the worst violence of the conflict. More than 370 people, including nearly 70 children, have been killed in regime and Russian bombardmen­t of east Aleppo since the regime’s assault began on Sept 22, the Observator­y said. Dozens of civilians, including children, have also died in rebel bombardmen­t of regime-controlled western districts, according to the monitor, which compiles its informatio­n from sources on the ground.

US Secretary of State John Kerry and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov are expected to hold fresh talks to try to revive the ceasefire deal in Lausanne today. UN Syria envoy Staffan de Mistura will attend, along with the chief diplomats from Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Qatar - all backers of Syrian opposition forces. Then in London on Sunday, Kerry will likely meet up with his counterpar­ts from Britain, France and Germany. — AFP

 ??  ?? ALEPPO: Syrian Hadi Mustafa Habboush, 9, brother of 13-year-old Jameel who was also rescued a day earlier from under the rubble of a building following Russian air strikes, looks on as he lies on a hospital bed in the rebel-held northern embattled...
ALEPPO: Syrian Hadi Mustafa Habboush, 9, brother of 13-year-old Jameel who was also rescued a day earlier from under the rubble of a building following Russian air strikes, looks on as he lies on a hospital bed in the rebel-held northern embattled...

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