The death toll from Syrian regime air strikes on the rebel-held enclave of Eastern Ghouta near Damascus Tuesday
has risen to 104, local monitoring group and local activists said.
Strikes on several locations in the besieged area east of the capital also wounded more than 100 people, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.
The civilian death toll has steadily risen as Assad regime forces continue to strike residential areas in opposition-held areas, the same sources said, speaking anonymously due to fears of reprisal.
Villages in Eastern Ghouta continue to be targeted by regime forces, despite the fact that such areas fall within a network of de-escalation zones in which acts of aggression are expressly prohibited.
Home to roughly 400,000 residents, Eastern Ghouta has remained under a crippling regime siege for the last five years.
The UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said at least 70 people were also wounded in the attacks, which the group said were carried out by Syrian forces and their Russian allies.
Of those killed, at least nine civilians, including two children, were killed in an air strike on a market in the town of Beit Sawa, while another six civilians, including one child, were killed in the town of Hazzeh, AFP news agency reported.
Syrian state media also said shelling on the Old City of Damascus, which is held by the government, killed one woman and wounded three other civilians.
Eastern Ghouta is the last remaining rebel-held stronghold near Damascus and has been under a government siege since 2013.
Human rights groups have struggled to access the area to provide an estimated 400,000 residents with much-needed food and medicine.
Local hospitals are running out of medical supplies and an acute food shortage has led to severe malnutrition.
Late last month, Syrian activists accused President Bashar al-Assad's forces of violating a Russian-brokered ceasefire in the area.
The air strikes on Eastern Ghouta came amid reports that at least 18 civilians were killed and dozens more were injured in a Syrian government bombardment on northern Idlib province, which is also held by rebel groups.
The International Committee of the Red Cross in Syria reported medical facilities were targeted in Idlib and the town of Hama.
"With the majority of hospitals no longer operating in these areas, these latest attacks will deprive tens of thousands of life-saving care," the ICRC said.
Both Eastern Ghouta and Idlib are among four so-called de-escalation zones in Syria, which were delineated last year as part of a ceasefire proposal meant to end hostilities between rebel and government forces.
In relevant development, Germany’s Federal Office for Economic Affairs and Export Control approved a license
for a company to sell
military applicable technology to Iranian companies that subsequently was used in Syrian regime chemical weapons attacks, reported the German publication Bild on Monday.
The German company Krempel, located near the southern city of Stuttgart, sold electronic press boards to Iranian companies that were used in the production of rockets.
The Jerusalem Post reported in 2017 that multiple German intelligence reports revealed that Iran sought chemical and biological weapon technology in the federal republic. (With Agecnies)
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