SYRIA STRIKES INTENSIFY
190 dead, 850 hurt since Sunday as UN calls for ceasefire
PRO-GOVERNMENT forces bombarded Syria’s eastern Ghouta yesterday, killing at least 49 people, after the heaviest oneday death toll there in three years on Monday, a war monitoring group said.
Some 127 people were killed in air raids, rocket strikes and shelling of the area near Damascus on Monday, according to the British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.
About 190 had died since the bombing intensified late on Sunday and 850 had been injured.
The United Nations called for an immediate ceasefire in the area on Monday, saying the situation was “spiralling out of control” after an “extreme escalation in hostilities”.
The Union of Medical Care and Relief Organisations, a coalition of international agencies that funds hospitals in Syria, said bombs had hit five hospitals in eastern Ghouta on Monday.
In Geneva, the UN children’s fund issued a blank “statement” to express its outrage at the casualties among Syrian children, saying it had run out of words.
The violence in eastern Ghouta is part of a wider escalation in fighting on several fronts in Syria as President Bashar al-Assad pushes to end the seven-year rebellion against him.
Mortars fired by rebels in eastern Ghouta landed in Damascus yesterday, causing two deaths and injuries, Syrian state media reported. At least one person died from rebel mortar fire in the capital on Monday.
Lebanon’s al-Manar television, which is aligned with Assad’s ally Hizbollah, reported on Monday that the Syrian army was sending reinforcements towards eastern Ghouta after rebel assaults.
Neither the Syrian military nor Russia, Assad’s most powerful supporter, commented on the renewed bombardment in eastern Ghouta, but they have often said they do not target civilians.
The Observatory said the intensified bombing was in preparation for a pro-government ground offensive against the enclave and that a rebel group there had foiled an attempt by Syria’s army to advance overnight.