Cape Argus

US ‘carpet bombed Raqqa into oblivion’

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MOSCOW: Russia accused the US-led coalition in Syria yesterday of wiping the city of Raqqa “off the face of the earth” with carpet bombing in the same way the US and Britain bombed Germany’s Dresden in 1945.

The Russian Defence Ministry, which has itself repeatedly been forced to deny accusation­s from activists and Western politician­s of bombing Syrian civilians, said it looked like the West was now rushing to provide financial aid to Raqqa to cover up evidence of its own crimes.

Major-General Igor Konashenko­v, a spokesman for the Defence Ministry, said that around 200 000 people had lived in Raqqa before the conflict in Syria, but that not more than 45 000 people remained.

US-backed militias in Syria declared victory over Islamic State in Raqqa, the group’s capital, last week, raising flags over the last jihadist footholds after a fourmonth battle.

“Raqqa has inherited the fate of Dresden in 1945, wiped off the face of the earth by Anglo-American bombardmen­ts,” said Konashenko­v.

Most of the German city was destroyed in Allied bombing raids just before the end of World War 2.

Though he said Russia welcomed Western promises of financial aid to rebuild Raqqa, Konashenko­v complained that numerous Russian requests for the West to give humanitari­an aid to Syrian civilians in other parts of the country had been rejected in previous years.

“What is behind the rush by Western capitals to provide targeted financial help only to Raqqa?” asked Konashenko­v.

“There’s only one explanatio­n – the desire to cover up evidence of the barbaric bombardmen­ts by the US air force and the coalition as fast as possible and to bury the thousands of civilians ‘liberated’ from Islamic State in the ruins.”

The US-led coalition says it is careful to avoid civilian casualties in its bombing runs against Islamic State in both Syria and Iraq, and that it investigat­es any allegation­s.

It has previously denied killing civilians in air strikes on Raqqa, saying its goal was “zero civilian casualties”.

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