The Borneo Post

Syrian army retakes Aleppo district as bombs rain down

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DAMASCUS: Syria’s army took control of a rebel-held district in central Aleppo on Tuesday, after days of heavy air strikes that have killed dozens and sparked allegation­s of war crimes.

In the first advance since announcing plans last week to retake all of the divided city, progovernm­ent troops seized the Farafira district northwest of Aleppo’s historic citadel, a military source told AFP.

“After neutralisi­ng many terrorists... units are now demining the area,” the source said.

The push follows several days of Syrian and Russian air strikes on rebel-held Aleppo neighbourh­oods – some of the fiercest bombardmen­t of the five-year conflict so far – after a ceasefire deal brokered by Moscow and Washington collapsed last week.

The Aleppo maelstrom prompted Western powers to accuse Russia of committing possible war crimes, charges the Kremlin condemned as “unacceptab­le”.

In the latest broadside, Nato Secretary General Jens Stoltenber­g also condemned the air campaign.

“The appalling attacks on Aleppo have shaken all of us, and the violence and the attacks we have seen... is morally totally unacceptab­le and is a blatant violation of internatio­nal law,” Stoltenber­g told a news conference in Bratislava.

On the ground in eastern Aleppo, an AFP correspond­ent said air strikes struck several neighbourh­oods simultaneo­usly, including in Al- Shaar, where a five- storey building was levelled with a family stuck inside.

One young girl, her body encased in rubble, was among the dead. Her father, in shock as rescue workers picked up her lifeless

After neutralisi­ng many terrorists... units are now demining the area.

body, collapsed beside her, saying: “She’s just sleeping. She’s just used to sleeping.”

The Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights, a Britain-based monitor, said that more than 165 people have been killed by Russian and regime bombardmen­t on the city since the government announced its offensive last week.

At least 23 civilians, including nine children, were killed Tuesday in raids on the neighbourh­oods of Al-Shaar and Al-Mashhad, it said.

As well as the intensifie­d violence, residents have been left reeling from food shortages and skyrocketi­ng prices.

The World Health Organizati­on warned that medical facilities in east Aleppo were on the verge of “complete destructio­n”.

“Over the last weekend alone, more than 200 people were injured and taken to understaff­ed health facilities in east Aleppo,” a spokeswoma­n said in Geneva.

The UN body called for “an immediate establishm­ent of humanitari­an routes to evacuate sick and wounded from the eastern part of the city.”

The Observator­y said that there were “significan­tly fewer” strikes on Aleppo on Tuesday than in recent days, but confirmed the advance by pro-government forces into Farafira.

Aleppo has been roughly divided between government control in the west and rebel control in the east since mid-2012, and the frontline has remained largely static despite continuous violence.

Earlier this month, a ceasefire went into effect across Syria, brokered after exhaustive talks between US Secretary of State John Kerry and his Russian counterpar­t Sergei Lavrov.

It was dubbed by Kerry as the “last chance” to end more than five years of devastatin­g conflict.

But it fell apart within a week, with each side blaming the other for the latest failure in a war that has cost more than 300,000 lives since March 2011. — AFP

Military source

 ??  ?? Syrian civilians and rescuers gather at site of government forces air strikes in the rebel held neighbourh­ood of Al-Shaar in Aleppo. — AFP photo
Syrian civilians and rescuers gather at site of government forces air strikes in the rebel held neighbourh­ood of Al-Shaar in Aleppo. — AFP photo

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