Nearly 30 dead in Syrian bombardment

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Members of a Syrian civil defence team, known as the White Helmets, search for survivors under the rubble of a building, following reported airstrikes on the Syrian town of Ibbin Semaan, in the western countryside of Aleppo. — AFP photo

SEMAAN: Russian and regime bombardment on the last major rebel enclave in Syria has killed 29 civilians in a day, a monitor said, as the regime’s inexorable northward push raises tensions with Turkey.

Six children were among nine civilians killed yesterday in raids on the village of Abin Semaan, in Aleppo province where Russian-backed regime forces have been waging a fierce offensive to retake a key highway, said the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

At the site of the raids, a rescue worker carried out the body of a little girl in a thick woollen blanket, while one of her relatives pleaded to take the body, said an AFP correspondent.

Volunteers shivering in near-freezing temperatures hacked away at mounds of rubble, rescuing a dust-covered man and a little child who had been trapped beneath.

The latest air strikes follow a night of heavy bombardment by Russia and the regime that had already killed at least 20 civilians in the neighbouring provinces of Idlib and Aleppo, according to the Observatory.

Since December, Syrian government forces backed by Moscow have pressed a blistering assault against the Idlib region in Syria’s northwest.

The violence has killed more than 350 civilians and sent some 586,000 fleeing towards relative safety near the Turkish border.

The United Nations and aid groups have appealed for an end to hostilities, warning that the exodus risks creating one of the worst humanitarian catastrophes of the nearly nine-year war.

The heightened bombardment has continued.

The escalation in northwest Syria has sparked alarm from rebel-backer Turkey which already hosts some 3.7 million Syrian refugees and fears another influx towards its border.

Since Friday, Turkey has shipped large convoys of vehicles carrying commandos, tanks and howitzer artillery pieces to shore up 12 military posts it had set up in Idlib under a 2018 deal with Russia to stave off a regime offensive.

But the agreement has failed to stymie the government’s advance, with Turkey saying regime forces have surrounded three of its outposts despite repeated warnings against such a move.

Turkish Defence Minister Hulusi Akar on Sunday said Ankara had other plans if agreements over the region continue to be violated.

“We have Plan B and Plan C,” he said in an interview with the Hurriyet daily.

“We on every occasion say ‘do not force us, otherwise our Plan B and Plan C are ready’.”

He did not give details, but referred to Ankara’s military campaigns in Syria since 2016.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has given Damascus until the end of the month to pull back from the outposts, and urged Russia to convince the regime to halt its offensive.

The warning came after eight Turks were killed last week by regime shelling, prompting a deadly response by the Turkish army.

The confrontation between the two forces was the most serious since Ankara first deployed troops in Syria. — AFP