Men pull a girl from the
rubble and haul her onto a dirty sheet of plastic, while another child, coated
in white dust save for a red streak of blood from his nose, lies with his crushed
leg dangling off a gurney - the grisly aftermath from the dropping of a crude
“barrel bomb” by Syrian forces on the city of Aleppo.
The bombing - one of at
least seven such attacks in Aleppo on Tuesday - struck a mosque that was being
used as a school, killing at least 11 people, activists said.
It was the latest example
of the heightened use of barrel bombs, devices packed with fuel, explosives and
scrap metal that are hurled from helicopters, often indiscriminately.
Since Thursday, around 80
people have been killed by barrel bombs used by Syrian President Bashar Assad’s
forces to try to dislodge rebels from Aleppo, according to figures provided by
the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which relies on a
network of activists on the ground.
The video uploaded from
the rebel-held Masaken Hanano district showed the aftermath of the explosion at
or near the Uthman Bin Affan mosque, where adults were teaching children the
Quran, said activist Hassoun Abu Faisal of the Aleppo Media Center.
The video was consistent
with what reporting by The Associated Press found.
A cameraman films from
inside a vehicle as it speeds toward a place where dust is drifting into a
clear blue sky. The camera swivels to men and boys running around a building
that has been torn in half by an explosion.
“Are there martyrs?” the
narrator asks. His camera focuses on a lump of red flesh in a vehicle.
It is the beginning of a
grim litany of death, as seen from the jerking camera.
A child, his legs
missing, lies on the ground, partially covered by a blanket.
“Are there anybody’s
children here?” cries one man.
“Bashar, you lowlife!”
cries another, referring to the Syrian ruler, raising his hands angrily to the
sky. Another man shakes a blackened body inside a vehicle.
A man carries a lifeless
boy, lifting him partly by his clothes, and leaves him on the sidewalk near two
other mangled corpses. An older man with a bloodied face stumbles toward the
child, weeping, “Oh, God, your grace, oh, God.”
The cameraman also
captures scenes of the boy with the crushed leg and the girl pulled from the
ruins.
The Observatory said at
least five of the dead in Masaken Hanano were children.
The use of barrel bombs
across Syria has been widely condemned by human rights groups because the
weapons’ indiscriminate nature. They have been a key part of a government
strategy to wrest back parts of Aleppo seized by rebels in mid-2012.
Far from the
battlegrounds in Syria, Assad’s chief ally, Russia, expressed confidence that
the government would return to the U.N.-hosted peace talks in Geneva that began
in January after three years of war.
“We have no doubts that
the government representatives will take place in a second round of talks
between the Syrian sides in Geneva,” Mikhail Bogdanov, Russian deputy foreign
minister and Moscow’s special envoy to the Middle East, said in comments
carried on Russian news agencies.
Assad’s government has
not committed to attending the next round of talks, expected on Feb. 10.
“We hope that both sides
will continue a patient, constructive discussion,” Bogdanov said.
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