The Mercury News

Airstrikes pound rebel town; 11 killed as market targeted

-

BEIRUT >> A Syrian government airstrike hit a busy open-air market in the country’s northwest on Saturday, killing at least 11 people, most of them children, according to activists. The town of Ariha has been particular­ly targeted over the last week as the government escalates its offensive against the country’s last rebel stronghold.

The airstrike in Ariha left an 18-monthold girl with an amputated leg, according to Dr. Mohamad Abrash, a surgeon and chief of Idlib’s central hospital. He said the girl’s father and brother died in the bombing, while her mother is in the ICU in the bed opposite her with a chest injury and internal bleeding in the head.

The Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights, which monitors the war, and another activist collective, called Ariha Today, said most of those killed were children. Ariha Today named six children under the age of 14 who it said were killed in the airstrike.

Ariha has been repeatedly targeted over the past week as Syria’s government looks to regain momentum in its stalled offensive, which began in late April. It is one of the main towns in Idlib province, which along with the surroundin­g rural areas of Hama province, are home to 3 million people.

Separately, local doctors said two medics and an ambulance driver were killed when an airstrike targeted their vehicle in Kfar Zita, a town on the frontline in Hama province, at the edge of the rebel stronghold.

Ghayath, an activist in Ariha who only gave his first name out of fears for his safety, said the strike hit the town during the busy weekly bazaar when people come to buy food and other necessitie­s. He said the death toll could have been higher if it were not for the warning from the local civilian defense team against large gatherings.

“The strike hit the main square, in the center of town,” he said.

“This is a systematic displaceme­nt policy to empty the busy town out,” said Abrash, the doctor, who said the injured travel nearly 3 miles to reach Idlib city, which has the most well-equipped hospital for surgery.

In the Syrian government’s airstrike campaign, backed by ally Russia, warplanes have targeted medical centers, water plants and residentia­l areas, in what the U.N. and rights groups call a deliberate campaign that amounts to war crimes.

 ?? SYRIAN CIVIL DEFENSE WHITE HELMETS VIA AP ?? Syrian White Helmet civil defense workers and civilians carry an injured man on a stretcher Saturday after an airstrike hit the northern town of Ariha in Syria.
SYRIAN CIVIL DEFENSE WHITE HELMETS VIA AP Syrian White Helmet civil defense workers and civilians carry an injured man on a stretcher Saturday after an airstrike hit the northern town of Ariha in Syria.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States