Gulf Times

Air strikes kill 15 civilians in south Syria rebel holdout

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Air strikes have killed 15 civilians in a rebel-held pocket of southern Syria as regime ally Russia presses talks for Damascus to retake the area, a monitor said yesterday.

The deadly strikes late Tuesday hit Nawa, the last town under rebel control in the southern province of Daraa, the Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights said.

Updating an earlier toll, the Britainbas­ed monitor said 15 civilians had been killed in the strikes, nearly half of them women.

The Observator­y could not determine whether the strikes on the town in Daraa’s west were carried out by the regime or its Russian ally.

The regime has in less than a month retaken more than 90% of Daraa province, which borders Jordan and was the cradle of Syria’s ill-fated 2011 uprising.

After regime forces launched a ferocious offensive on June 19, Russia pressured rebels to hand over eastern parts of the province in early July, and the provincial capital last week.

Other towns in the west of the province have also joined the deal, but opposition fighters in Nawa — where tens of thousands of people live — have resisted.

“Negotiatio­ns were ongoing Wednesday towards Nawa joining the reconcilia­tion deal” with the regime for the wider province, Observator­y head Rami Abdel Rahman said.

A ceasefire deal announced earlier this month between the regime and rebels in Daraa province did not include jihadists.

Yesterday, Russian air strikes and regime barrel bombs targeted hills outside Nawa held by the Hayat Tahrir al-Sham group, led by Syria’s former Al Qaeda affiliate.

Later in the day, a car bomb hit an area outside the town, killing 14 pro-regime fighters.

Heavy air strikes also pounded a southweste­rn corner of the province controlled by the Islamic State militant group.

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