Dozens of people
have been killed in air strikes on the northern Syrian city of Aleppo, a
monitoring group said on Monday, including at least 29 people in a
single neighborhood. Also on Monday, state news agency SANA said two people were killed when mortars struck central Damascus. The
opposition Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said air strikes killed
29 people on Sunday, including women and children, in the southern
Al-Ferdous district of Aleppo, a city that was once Syria's largest and a
major commercial hub. Another
14 people were killed in the Baeedeen neighborhood in "barrel bomb"
attacks - strikes in which helicopters drop highly destructive
improvised explosives - the group said. A further five died in barrel
bomb attacks in the village of Tlajabin, it added. Western
powers have condemned the use of barrel bombs as a war crime, but they
continue to fall nearly every day in Aleppo and other parts of Syria. SANA
said two people were killed in Damascus when mortars fired by
"terrorists" - its term for rebel fighters - hit the Al-Salihiya
neighborhood of the capital and a nearby area. More
than 150,000 people have been killed in Syria's conflict, which started
as a peaceful protest movement against President Bashar al-Assad's rule
in March 2011 and turned into civil war after a government crackdown. Reuters
Air strikes kill dozens in Syria's Aleppo: monitor group
Zaman Alwasl
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