Kuwait Times

Syria shelling kills 6 schoolchil­dren in besieged enclave

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JISREEN, Syria: At least six schoolchil­dren were among 11 people killed in Syrian regime shelling yesterday in Eastern Ghouta, a war monitor said, despite a ceasefire in the hunger-hit rebel enclave. The bombardmen­t of the rebel-held pocket outside Damascus came as a new round of peace talks to end Syria’s six-year war entered a second day in the Kazakh capital Astana. Government fire on the besieged region has been on the rise in the past week, and the Britain-based Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights monitor said the latest shelling hit a school in the town of Jisreen.

“A shell fired by regime troops hit the entrance of a school in Jisreen just as children were leaving it,” said Observator­y director Rami Abdel Rahman. A medical source at the town hospital confirmed the death toll and said another 25 people were wounded. The Observator­y said earlier that four children had died, but two later succumbed to their wounds in hospital. An AFP photograph­er at the medical facility saw the bodies of four children, wrapped in blood-stained white shrouds. Several wounded children lay or sat in shock on hospital beds, including one with severed legs. A man cried out after learning his son had died, as others around him tried to comfort him.

Small blue schoolbags and a tiny pair of shoes lay in a corner, drenched in blood. Outside the primary school, children stared at the pools of blood staining the concrete ground. “I was coming out of school and was about to turn into a side street when the shell hit. There were dead people, wounded people,” one child told AFP. The Observator­y said regime bombardmen­t yesterday also hit other areas of Eastern Ghouta, where opposition fighters have been battling President Bashar Al-Assad’s troops for six years.

The regime on July 22 announced a ceasefire with rebels in the besieged area, which has been included in a so-called “de-escalation zone” agreed by Turkey, Russia and Iran. Yesterday, regime shelling on the Mesraba area, also in Eastern Ghouta, killed four civilians including two children, the Observator­y said. An AFP journalist at a morgue saw rescue volunteers and young men slip the bodies of a father and his son into white plastic bags. “May God avenge oppressors,” the man’s brother cried.

In the town of Harasta, shelling also hit near a school as pupils were leaving it, wounding 10 people including five children. On Sunday, 11 civilians including a journalist for pro-opposition television were killed in Eastern Ghouta.

The shelling comes as Eastern Ghouta, where an estimated 400,000 people live, faces a mounting humanitari­an crisis. Shocking AFP images from the region this month showed severely underweigh­t children, and doctors reported two infants had died of malnutriti­on and related complicati­ons.

On Monday, dozens of trucks carrying aid for 40,000 people entered Eastern Ghouta. The region was once a prime agricultur­al region famed for its orchards. But the rebel stronghold has been under a tight government siege since 2013, causing shortages of food and medicine, as well as price hikes for the local and smuggled supplies available. Basic services are virtually non-existent, with electricit­y produced only by generators and water often dirty and a vector for disease.

 ??  ?? JISREEN, Syria: A man mourns over the bodies of schoolchil­dren at a makeshift hospital following government shelling in this rebel-held besieged town yesterday.
JISREEN, Syria: A man mourns over the bodies of schoolchil­dren at a makeshift hospital following government shelling in this rebel-held besieged town yesterday.

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