Syria regime bombs rebels as Aleppo food aid runs out

A damaged ambulance is pictured after an airstrike on the rebel-held town of Atareb, in the countryside west of Aleppo, Syria November 15, 2016. REUTERS/Ammar Abdullah

 

Aleppo / AFP

Syrian government and Russian warplanes pounded rebel-held parts of northern Syria on Wednesday, including battered second city Aleppo, where food aid rations were all-but-exhausted after months of regime siege.
The renewed bombardment has killed at least 20 people, including nine children, in Aleppo alone in the last 24 hours, and sparked anger from the United States and United Nations.
It comes as President Bashar al-Assad said in an interview that US president-elect Donald Trump could be a “natural ally” if he fights “terrorists”. Damascus considers all those who oppose Assad’s government to be “terrorists” like the IS group, which Trump has said should be the focus of US involvement in Syria.
Damascus and its ally Russia launched a wide-ranging assault on rebels on Tuesday, shattering a month of relative calm in the rebel-held east of devastated Aleppo.
An AFP correspondent in the east reported heavy bombardment throughout the night and into the morning. And the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a Britain-based monitor, said at least 12 civilians, among them four children, had been killed in government air strikes and artillery fire in eastern Aleppo on Wednesday. That followed the deaths of at least eight civilians in the besieged opposition-held side of the city on Tuesday, the monitor said.
The Observatory also reported ongoing strikes in Idlib province, in northwestern Syria, which is mostly controlled by a coalition of rebel groups including Al-Qaeda’s former affiliate Fateh al-Sham Front.

Food aid runs out in Aleppo
The monitor said six people had been killed in strikes in the village of Kafr Jalis in Idlib on Tuesday night.
“The shelling targeted innocent civilians in their homes in Kafr Jalis, and there is a lot of destruction,” said Yahya Arja from the White Helmets civil defence in the province.
“We worked through the night to lift the debris and remove the martyrs and surviving civilians, and now we’re trying to remove the rubble blocking the roads,” he said.
The bombardment ended a period of relative respite, particularly in eastern Aleppo, where Moscow halted air strikes on October 18 ahead of a series of brief ceasefires.
The ceasefires were intended to encourage residents and surrendering rebels to leave the east,
but few did so, expressing fear of moving into government-held territory. Food aid stockpiled in the east is all-but-exhausted, with international organisations and their local partners saying they were distributing the final rations in recent days.
No aid has entered the eastern neighbourhoods since government troops surrounded it in mid-July.
Once Syria’s economic powerhouse, Aleppo has been ravaged by the war that has killed more than 300,000 people across the country since it started in March 2011 with anti-government protests.

Assad open to Trump alliance
Assad ally Russia intervened in September last year in a bid to bolster the government, and on Tuesday announced warplanes taking off from its Admiral Kuznetsov aircraft carrier had carried out their first sorties in the country. Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu said Russian forces were launching a “major operation” in Idlib and central Hom province, targeting IS and Fateh al-Sham Front.
But the bombardment has been criticised by both the UN and Washington, with the General Assembly’s human rights committee voting overwhelmingly on Tuesday to condemn escalating attacks on civilians.
Washington said it had received reports that the latest bombing raids had damaged civilian infrastructure in rebel areas. “We strongly condemn the resumption of air strikes in Syria by the Russians as well as the Syrian regime,” State Department spokeswoman Elizabeth Trudeau said. “The most recent reported attacks are on five hospitals and one mobile clinic in Syria. We believe it’s a violation of international law.”

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