Over 400 killed in 10-day air blitz of Syria's Aleppo: NGO

Syrian Observatory for Human Rights says toll since December 15 from air strikes and a bombing campaign stands at 410, including 117 children.

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BEIRUT // A 10-day air offensive by Syria’s regime against rebel areas of divided Aleppo city and nearby villages has killed more than 400 people, including 117 children, a monitor said yesterday.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said that by Tuesday night the toll since December 15 from air strikes and a bombing campaign using barrels packed with TNT stood at 410. Also among the dead were 34 women, 30 rebel fighters and nine militant Islamists.

The Britain-based group said that the air force pressed its assault into an 11th day yesterday, with fresh raids on the opposition-held districts of Sakhur and Jabal Badro in eastern Aleppo city.

Aleppo has been divided into regime and rebel-held enclaves since the opposition launched a massive offensive in July last year.

Rights groups have blasted the regime’s relentless air raids against Aleppo and its dropping of massively destructive barrel bombs in civilian areas.

Human Rights Watch has described the use of such weapons as “indiscriminate and therefore unlawful”.

The United States too has condemned the regime’s aerial assault on civilian areas of Aleppo, accusing the military of using barrel bombs and SCUD missiles “indiscriminately”.

Yesterday, the Arab League and the European Union joined the chorus of criticism against the regime’s offensive.

Arab League chief Nabil Al Arabi meanwhile called on “the Syrian army to stop the air bombings” on Aleppo, condemning the killing of “hundreds of innocent civilians, especially women and children.”

Mr Al Arabi also called on the UN Security Council “to take responsibility” to end the conflict raging in Syria.

The opposition National Coalition has said it will boycott peace talks slated for January if the bombing of Aleppo does not cease.

A security source in Damascus on Tuesday defended the military’s operations as necessary to “save Aleppo”.

“We do not target any area unless we are 100 per cent sure that the ones there are terrorists,” the source said, using the regime’s term for the rebels.

“The bodies you see on television are the bodies of terrorists and mercenaries, most of whom travelled into Syria from abroad.”

Meanwhile, fighting raged yesterday in the Aleppo province area of Naqarin, pitting rebels and Islamists on one side against the army backed by Lebanese Shiite Hizbollah fighters and the paramilitary National Defence Force.

The regime’s ground forces were backed by helicopters, which dropped barrel bombs on rebel-held areas, the Observatory said.

*Agence France-Presse