The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

2 Russian nurses killed in rebel shelling

Eight civilians also killed Monday in Aleppo attacks.

- By Albert Aji and Bassem Mroue

ALEPPO, SYRIA — Rebel shelling killed two Russian nurses and eight civilians Monday in Aleppo, and a Russian fighter jet crashed as it was returning to an aircraft carrier in the Mediterran­ean after a sortie over Syria, but the pilot ejected safely, Moscow officials said.

The shelling that targeted government-controlled western Aleppo was one of the most intense in recent days. It coincided with a crushing air and ground assault that has seen forces loyal to Syrian President Bashar Assad recapture more than half of opposition-held eastern Aleppo.

Russia and militias allied with Iran and Lebanon’s Hezbollah have been staunch supporters of Assad in his country’s bitter civil war, now in its sixth year.

The shelling initially killed one female nurse and wounded two Russian medics working in a field hospital, a Russian officer told reporters in the northern city. He spoke on condition of anonymity in line with regulation­s. Moscow had sent hospital equipment to the government-controlled Furqan neighborho­od on Sunday.

Another nurse who was wounded in the shelling later died, the Russian Defense Ministry said.

“The Russian and Syrian doctors tried their best to save her,” Maj. Gen. Igor Konashenko­v said in an emailed statement. Another Russian, a pediatrici­an, remains in critical condition.

He urged internatio­nal organizati­ons such as the Red Cross to condemn the attack on the health workers “who were doing their medical duty to help the civilians of Aleppo.”

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said talks would be held with the United States this week in Geneva on a rebel withdrawal from eastern Aleppo, Russian news agencies reported. The Russians have tried before to coax rebels into leaving the territory, setting up corridors out of the district, but the fighters have refused because they want to retain their control over parts of the city. Some fear the Russians and their Syrian allies would not ensure their safety.

Monday’s fighting was the worst in days. Syrian government artillery, tanks and warplanes pounded rebel-held parts of the city for hours. The airstrikes were so intense that buildings on the western side of the city shook. Opposition activists and rescue workers said four people were killed in a barrel bomb attack on a rebel-held district, and three more were trapped in the rubble.

Insurgents also struck back in the government-held western parts of the city with dozens of mortar shells. At least eight civilians were killed in different neighborho­ods, according to state news agency SANA. Among the dead were two children and four women, said the opposition Britain-based Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights.

Thick smoke billowed from behind Aleppo’s famous citadel where Syrian forces were advancing from the west and east to try to cut rebel-held districts in half.

On the city’s southern edge, heavy machine gun fire could be heard.

An Associated Press team in government-controlled Aleppo said the attack on the Russian field hospital left the large tent charred and beds overturned. The shelling struck shortly before the inaugurati­on of makeshift clinic. The AP crew was accompanie­d by representa­tives of the Syrian army.

Konashenko­v said an unspecifie­d number of residents at the field hospital were wounded, and he accused the U.S., Britain and France of telling the rebels the location of the hospital.

 ?? HASSAN AMMAR / AP ?? Smoke rises following a Syrian government air strike on rebel positions in eastern Aleppo, Syria, Monday. The government seized large swaths of the Aleppo enclave under rebel control since 2012 in the offensive.
HASSAN AMMAR / AP Smoke rises following a Syrian government air strike on rebel positions in eastern Aleppo, Syria, Monday. The government seized large swaths of the Aleppo enclave under rebel control since 2012 in the offensive.

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