The Star Malaysia

Air raids keep pounding Aleppo

Air attacks on rebel-held positions in new offensive to retake city

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Reports of intense bombardmen­t from ground artillery as well.

ALEPPO: Syrian and Russian aircraft pounded rebel-held areas of Aleppo, a monitor said, after the army announced a new offensive aimed at retaking all of the divided second city.

An AFP correspond­ent in the opposition-held east of the city reported intense bombardmen­t both from the air and by ground artillery.

It came after the Syrian army announced late on Thursday that it was launching a new offensive to retake rebel-held parts of the city.

A military source said the bombardmen­t was in preparatio­n for a ground operation.

“We have begun reconnaiss­ance, aerial and artillery bombardmen­t,” he said.

“This could go on for hours or days before the ground operation starts. The timing of the ground operation will depend on the results of the strikes and the situation on the ground.”

An army officer in Aleppo confirmed that the ground assault had yet to begin.

The Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights reported at least 30 strikes on rebel-held districts during the night and early yesterday.

The Britain-based monitoring group said at least 10 people had been killed, among them two children, and dozens wounded.

It said more dead were feared buried under the rubble.

The correspond­ent said the scale of the destructio­n was the heaviest he had seen in years of fighting in the city and was overwhelmi­ng rescue teams.

He said two civil defence centres were among the buildings hit in the bombardmen­t, reporting artillery barrages, barrel bombings by helicopter­s and strikes by fighter jets in quick succession.

Observator­y chief Rami Abdel Rahman said Russian warplanes were taking part in the strikes alongside Syrian aircraft.

“The Syrians are dropping barrel bombs and the Russian planes are launching strikes,” he said.

He said it was the prelude to “a large-scale land offensive supported by Russian air strikes aimed at taking bit by bit the eastern sector of Aleppo and emptying it of its residents.” A truce deal hammered out between Russia and the United States briefly halted the violence earlier this month, but it collapsed after just a week without any of the promised deliveries of desperatel­y needed relief supplies.

UN envoy Staffan de Mistura warned: “What is happening is Aleppo is under attack and everyone is going back to the conflict.”

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