The Standard (St. Catharines)

Syria activists: Strikes kill 4, including woman, her child

- BASSEM MROUE

BEIRUT — Airstrikes targeted Syria’s last major rebel stronghold in the northweste­rn province of Idlib on Monday, killing at least four people, including a woman and her child, opposition activists said.

The attacks come as Syrian government forces turn their focus on another rebel-held town in Idlib, Maaret al-Numan, following gains they made last week.

Syrian troops have been on the offensive since April 30, and have captured all rebel-held areas in the adjoining Hama province, as well as the town of Khan Sheikhoun in Idlib. From the town, they are now pushing north.

The opposition’s Syrian Civil Defence rescue group, also known as White Helmets, said the airstrikes and artillery shelling targeted the village of in Basqala and nearby locations. Three people died in Basqala and the fourth, a man, in another village close by, Maaret Harmeh.

The Britain-based Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights gave a higher toll, saying the airstrikes killed six people in Idlib, including three in the village of Basqala on the southern edge of the province. Among the three killed in Basqala were a woman and her child, it said. The difference­s between the Observator­y’s death toll and that of the White Helmets could not immediatel­y be reconciled.

State news agency SANA said troops are pounding insurgent positions in the town of Maaret al-Numan and several nearby villages. It said insurgents fired rockets in government-held villages, inflicting casualties among the civilian population.

Maaret al-Numan, like Khan Sheikhoun, sits on the highway linking Damascus with the northern city of Aleppo, Syria’s largest. Government forces are trying to eventually open that highway.

The months of fighting have also displaced more than half a million civilians toward northern parts of Idlib, already home to some three million people, according to United Nations humanitari­an officials.

UN spokespers­on Stephane Dujarric said 15 people, including four children, were reportedly killed over the weekend. In Idlib, he said people have sought shelter in more than 100 schools, with hundreds of thousands staying in the open air outside overcrowde­d camps and reception centres.

“As the new school year is scheduled to begin soon, access to education will be compromise­d for many children,” he said.

Also Monday, Turkey’s defence minister, Hulusi Akar, said Turkish and U.S. troops will soon begin joint patrols as part of a deal for a so-called safe zone in northeaste­rn Syria. He said a joint helicopter flight has already taken place.

Akar made the comments days after announcing that a joint U.S.-Turkish operation centre for the safe zone had started working under the command of one Turkish and one American general.

 ?? SYRIAN CIVIL DEFENSE WHITE HELMETS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Syrian troops have been on the offensive since April 30, and have captured all rebel-held areas in the adjoining Hama province. Here, people inspect the buildings following the bombing.
SYRIAN CIVIL DEFENSE WHITE HELMETS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Syrian troops have been on the offensive since April 30, and have captured all rebel-held areas in the adjoining Hama province. Here, people inspect the buildings following the bombing.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada