Syrian government aircraft dropped
barrels packed with explosives on opposition-held areas of the contested
northern city of Aleppo on Sunday, leveling buildings, incinerating cars and
killing at least 37 people including 16 children, activists said. Aleppo
has been a major front in the Syrian civil war since rebels launched an
offensive on the city in mid-2012. Nearly a year and a half of fighting has
destroyed much of the city, while also cutting it up into rebel-held and
government-controlled areas.
On Sunday, government helicopters pounded the
opposition neighborhoods of Haidariya, Ard al-Hamra, Sukhour, Marjeh and at
least two others with barrel bombs, the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for
Human Rights said. Observatory director Rami Abdurrahman said Syrian air force
jets were also flying sorties over the same districts.
The government
frequently uses barrel bombs, which contain hundreds of kilograms (pounds) of
explosives and cause massive damage on impact.
The Aleppo Media Center activist
group said government aircraft dropped at least 25 barrel bombs on the city Sunday.
One amateur video provided by the
AMC showed the aftermath of a strike on a roundabout in Haidariya where an
informal station for transport vans was located. In the video, residents
investigate the smoldering wreckage of at least three vehicles destroyed in the
bombing. Sirens wail in the background.
Another amateur video posted online
showed the aftermath of a strike on Sukhour. The footage shows a crowd gathered
in a narrow street littered with shattered masonry and other rubble from a
house that appeared to have been hit by the airstrike.
The videos appeared genuine and
corresponded to other AP reporting.
The Observatory, which monitors the
conflict through a network of activists on the ground, also said the number
people killed in the town of Adra northeast of Damascus after an
al-Qaida-linked rebel faction attacked on Wednesday has risen to 32.
Abdurrahman said the dead are
primarily members the Alawite sect, as well as a few Druse and Shiite Muslims.
The killings point at the dark
sectarian overtones the conflict has taken on since the uprising against
President Bashar Assad began with largely peaceful protests in March 2011.
Assad is an Alawite, and members of
the offshoot of Shiite Islam form the core of his security forces. Other
minorities in the country, including Christians, Druse and Shiites, have mostly
sided with Assad or remained on the fence, fearing a takeover of the country by
Islamic extremists. The rebels, meanwhile, are primarily Sunni Muslims.
2 Esdras 13:31 And one shall undertake to fight against another one city against another one place against another one people against another and one realm against another
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