Daily Mail

12 children killed in blast as Assad steps up assault on rebels

- By Larisa Brown Middle East Correspond­ent

A DOZEN children were among at least 39 civilians killed in an explosion at a weapons depot in the last major rebel stronghold in Syria yesterday.

The huge blast caused two buildings to collapse at the site in Sarmada in Idlib province near the Turkish border.

One rescue worker was seen carrying the motionless body of a small child to an ambulance, with women also among the dead.

Regime forces have ramped up their deadly bombardmen­t of southern Idlib in recent days, and sent reinforcem­ents to nearby areas they control. President Bashar al-Assad has warned he intends to retake Idlib, after his Russia- backed regime regained control of swathes of rebel-held territory elsewhere.

There are concerns for the civilians, trapped among Syria’s most hardline jihadists, facing an onslaught by Assad’s forces. Idlib, which is controlled by Islamist rebels and al-Qaeda-linked fighters, has become the final refuge for more than two million displaced civilians.

The Russian and Syrian military stepped up airstrikes and artillery fire on Friday in what was said to be the opening salvo of a campaign to retake the province.It was also reported elite regime forces had mustered for an expected ground assault. The conquest of Idlib is considered one of the final acts of a civil war that has lasted seven years and claimed the lives of more than 350,000 people.

There are fears such a military operation could see a repeat of the murderous airstrikes, barrel bombs and chemical weapons attacks previously deployed by the regime.

Rami Abdel Rahman, head of the Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights monitor, said the civilian death toll from the Sarmada explosion had been revised up as more bodies were pulled from the rubble.

Mr Abdel Rahman added that the cause of the blast was ‘not yet clear’ but that most of those killed were relatives of fighters from Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, an alliance led by jihadists from Syria’s former AlQaeda affiliate.

Rescue workers pulled out ‘five people who were still alive’, a civil defence source said.

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