The Oklahoman

Bloody 24 hours as Syria, Russia escalate attacks on Damascus

- BY SARAH EL DEEB AND PHILIP ISSA

BEIRUT — Syrian opposition rescue teams pulled babies from incubators in a hospital under attack, rushing them to safety in a pickup truck. Elderly patients lay motionless on the ground and rescue workers searched for survivors in the rubble of a destroyed apartment building as stepped up airstrikes by Syrian government forces and their Russian allies on the country’s last remaining rebel stronghold­s killed at least 28 civilians on Monday.

“It is like the end of days,” said Raed Saleh, the head of the first-responders known as White Helmets, describing the last 24 hours of attacks on the opposition-held eastern Damascus suburb of Ghouta and northweste­rn Idlib province.

The escalating offensive, which included a suspected chlorine attack a day earlier, reached a new ferocity after insurgents downed a Russian Su-25 over the weekend, the first time they scored such a major hit against the government’s main ally, Moscow.

Russia has waged a punishing aerial campaign against Syria’s armed opposition since intervenin­g in the civil war on the side of its ally, President Bashar Assad, in 2015. Cease-fire deals have failed to quell the violence or restore humanitari­an aid to besieged Ghouta, were 400,000 residents are holed up amid warnings of a looming humanitari­an disaster.

“If a Russian plane was downed, revenge should not be on civilians and children,” Saleh said. “Now more than any other day, we need the internatio­nal community to restore the humanity it has lost in Syria.”

The al-Qaida-linked Levant Liberation Committee, which is the dominant militant group in Idlib, said its fighters shot down the Russian jet near the town of Saraqeb in Idlib province and killed its pilot after he ejected from the plane. Rebels have previously claimed to have downed Syrian government planes or drones, but it was the first time they hit a Russian aircraft.

Russia’s military bases in western Syria were also hit last month in a series of drone attacks, challengin­g Moscow’s gains in the country still torn by conflict.

Since then, activists say Russian and Syrian government forces have stepped up their attacks.

Activists and rescue workers reported at least 28 civilians, including six children, were killed on Monday in Ghouta, where nearly 40 airstrikes hit the suburb that is the last opposition stronghold in Damascus.

In Idlib, two hospitals have been hit with airstrikes since Sunday and at least 14 people killed. Rescue workers continued Monday to sift through the wreckage of a sixstory building flattened a day earlier, pulling out three bodies after daylight. At least eight residents remained missing when the search was suspended at nightfall, one rescuer said.

In Idlib, a hospital in the town of Kafranbel was bombed early Monday, according to the activistru­n Edlib Media Center and the Observator­y. Another hospital, in Maaret alNuman, was struck three times late Sunday and put out of service, according to the Syrian American Medical Society, which runs the facility.

The Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights said at least 70 people were wounded Monday and the number of casualties was likely to climb as rescue operations got underway.

The dead included a rescue worker who was killed as his team searched for survivors in the town of Arbeen, which was hit by 15 airstrikes Monday afternoon.

Yousef al-Boustani, an opposition media activist in eastern Ghouta’s Douma neighborho­od, called the air raids “hysterical.”

“We were seeing three planes in the air at a time,” he said.

On Sunday, the White Helmets search-andrescue group and a medical charity reported that several people suffered breathing difficulti­es after a suspected chlorine gas attack on Saraqeb, days after the Trump administra­tion accused Assad’s government of producing and using “new kinds of weapons” to deliver poisonous gases. Damascus denied the White House’s charges, and The Associated Press could not independen­tly verify the reports of a chlorine gas attack.

The White Helmets said three of its rescuers and six other people suffered breathing problems. The Syrian American Medical Society said its hospitals in Idlib treated 11 patients for suspected chlorine gas poisoning.

A U.N. investigat­ive commission said in 2016 that the Syrian government was behind at least three chlorine gas attacks during the seven-year civil war, but activists and monitoring groups contend there have been more.

 ?? [GHOUTA MEDIA CENTER VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] ?? An injured boy receives treatment at a hospital Monday in Hazeh in eastern Ghouta, Syria, the only remaining rebel stronghold near the capital of Damascus. The Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights says waves of airstrikes hit at least five neighborho­ods...
[GHOUTA MEDIA CENTER VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] An injured boy receives treatment at a hospital Monday in Hazeh in eastern Ghouta, Syria, the only remaining rebel stronghold near the capital of Damascus. The Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights says waves of airstrikes hit at least five neighborho­ods...

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