Santa Fe New Mexican

Russian, Israeli planes hit Syria in separate strikes, killing 10

- By Sarah Dadouch

BEIRUT — At least 10 people were killed in Syria overnight and this morning, following Israeli strikes on the capital in the south and Russian strikes in the northwest of the country.

Syrian state news agency SANA reported Israeli strikes coming from the disputed Golan Heights shortly after midnight Friday, killing three soldiers, wounding seven others and causing material damage.

Jordanian state television later reported that the toll of Syrian soldiers rose to five.

Syria regularly reports airstrikes from southern neighbor Israel, its long-standing sworn enemy. The strikes, rarely acknowledg­ed by Israel, typically target military installati­ons, arms depots, and other locations that are under the control of Iran-aligned groups.

Last month, airstrikes that the government attributed to Israel hit Syria’s main airport in the capital, Damascus, heavily damaging runways and at least one hall in the airport’s terminal.

The full extent of the damage and casualties caused by such strikes cannot be verified.

On the other side of the country in the northweste­rn Idlib countrysid­e, Russian airstrikes killed seven civilians, according to local first responder group the White Helmets. One strike leveled a modest building in an olive grove that was formerly a chicken farm, the White Helmets media office told the Washington Post, killing four children from one family. Another strike killed two men who had approached the scene after the initial attack.

Photos published by the group show a gutted building with rubble and colorful blankets and pillows spilling out. One showed the corpse of a young girl, half her body sticking out from under the rubble, her wrist adorned with gold bracelets. Another was of her bloodied uncle, sitting barefoot and cross-legged, watching the civil defense members carry out their job.

The children’s father and mother are being treated in a hospital, the White Helmets said, who identified the family as displaced from a village in the northeaste­rn Aleppo countrysid­e.

Another attack struck civilian residences nearby, killing a man on a motorcycle, the group said.

Russia is a staunch supporter of Syrian President Bashar Assad, whose brutal crackdown on popular protests that erupted in 2011 largely made him a global pariah.

Russia’s military interventi­on in 2015 was a lifeline for Assad, who at the time had lost large swaths of Syria to various rebel and extremist groups.

Assad has since gained back much of the territory he had lost, and as his troops, backed by Iranian-aligned groups and Russian air power, won back territory, his government loaded green buses with former rebels, their families and supporters and sent them to the northwest of the country.

The enclave, which sprawls across Idlib province and surroundin­g areas, is host to roughly 4.5 million people, many of them displaced multiple times by the war. The area is controlled by opposition militant groups, and worsening overall living conditions have left

4.1 million in need of humanitari­an assistance.

The last Russian strike had been 10 days earlier, hitting military targets that had exchanged artillery and missile fire with Syrian government troops.

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