The
Syrian government extended its intense aerial campaign against rebel-held areas
of the northern city of Aleppo on Monday, conducting a series of airstrikes
that killed at least 18 people, including five children, activists said.
President
Bashar Assad’s air force has pounded opposition areas of the divided city since
mid-December, reducing apartment blocks to rubble and overwhelming already
strapped hospitals and medical clinics with the wounded. On Sunday, government
aircraft also targeted areas of east Aleppo under rebel control, killing nearly
40 people.
Monday’s
air raids hit the districts of Hanano, Qadi Askar and Mouwasalat, the
Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said. The group, which
monitors the conflict through a network of activists on the ground, said
helicopters dropped crude bombs barrels packed with explosives, fuel and scraps
of metal on the neighbourhoods, causing immense damage.
Amateur
videos posted online provided a window on the carnage.
In
one clip from Hanano, residents frantically dig through the shattered blocks of
concrete and twisted metal strewn across the street in search of survivors. A
man stumbles as he carries a wounded boy wrapped in a blanket, his arm and face
covered in blood. Further down the street, the facades of buildings have been
torn off by the bomb.
In
a second video, two men place the shredded remains of a body onto a carpet.
Another body covered in a blanket lies in a pool of blood on dusty pavement.
Nearby, two women rock back and forth as they wail over a third body.
The
videos appeared genuine and corresponded to other Associated Press reporting of
the events depicted.
The
Syrian government has not relented in its bombardment of rebel-held areas of
Aleppo since launching what appeared to be a concerted aerial campaign there
late last year. Over a two-week stretch in December alone, activists say
airstrikes killed more than 500 people.
Despite
the immense suffering and terrific toll of the war, the violence shows little
sign of abating.
On
Monday, the Observatory said that January was the deadliest month of the
conflict. The group said it recorded 5,794 deaths that it had evidence of last
month, plus around another 1,000 that it knew of but for which it did not have
names, photographs or video to provide final confirmation.
The
high death toll is at least partly due to intense infighting among rebels in
northern Syria that broke out on Jan. 3. The clashes, which pit the extremist
Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant against ultraconservative Islamic brigades
and more moderate rebels, have killed more than 1,400 people alone.
Also
Monday, the main Western—backed opposition group, the Syrian National
Coalition, said the son of senior member Faiz Sara recently died in “a regime
intelligence prison.”
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