(Reuters) - At
least 21 people were killed and around 100 wounded overnight when Syrian
government war planes bombed a town in northern Syria controlled by
Islamic State militants, a group monitoring the war said on Sunday. The attack came hours before a
United Nations mediator met senior Syrian officials in Damascus to
discuss ways to ease the war, which has entered its fourth year, killed
around 200,000 people and since September drawn in the United States and
allies in air strikes against the Sunni militant group Islamic State. The
government of President Bashar al-Assad has stepped up its campaign
against Islamic State and other enemies in the weeks since U.S.-led
strikes began. Washington, which is
also bombing the fighters in territory they control in Iraq, says it
opposes both Islamic State and Assad's government. In Syria it supports
what it calls moderate rebel groups who are fighting against both in a
complex, multi-sided civil war. But
some rebels complain that the U.S. air strikes help Assad by hurting
his enemies. The government has not complained about the U.S. action and
has concentrated its firepower on the western parts of the country
while U.S. forces bomb the east. Fighting
between Assad's government and rebels has intensified across northern
Syria in recent days in areas close to the Turkish border in and around
the northern city of Aleppo and in the Damascus countryside close to
Lebanon. Syrian helicopters dropped
"barrel bombs" - steel drums full of shrapnel and explosives - while
warplanes launched strikes on al-Bab town northeast of the city of
Aleppo, the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said. One
of the 21 killed was a child and the death count was expected to rise
as some of the wounded were in a serious condition, said the
Observatory, which gathers information from a variety of sources in
Syria. There was no immediate
report on the latest strikes on Syrian state media. The Syrian army
previously hit an area near al-Bab in September, saying it had
"eliminated a number of terrorists" shortly after the U.S.-led strikes
started. At four least strikes by
the U.S.-led coalition hit the predominantly Kurdish border town of
Kobani on Sunday, according to a Reuters correspondent on the Turkish
side of the border. BESIEGED The
town, known as Ayn al-Arab in Arabic, has been besieged by Islamic
State fighters since September, becoming one of the highest-profile
battlefields of the war. Iraqi
Kurdish fighters known as peshmerga, who have been drawn into the battle
to back up their Syrian kinsmen, fired volleys of rockets towards
Islamic State positions in villages around the town. Machinegun fire
rang out through the centre of Kobani, where several mortars also
landed. After losing scores of
men in the weeks-long assault, Islamic State has now called on dozens of
its fighters in the northeast of Aleppo province to head west towards
Kobani, the Observatory also said on Sunday. In
Damascus, U.N. envoy Staffan de Mistura met with Foreign Minister Walid
al-Moualem and other government officials, state news agency SANA said. They
talked about de Mistura's address to the U.N. Security Council last
month in which he proposed an "action plan" of implementing some local
ceasefires, SANA added. A
representative of de Mistura was not immediately available for comment.
It was his second visit to Damascus since taking up his post in July. On
his previous visit, he met with President Bashar al-Assad. Some
Western diplomats are concerned that de Mistura's push for local
ceasefires could be tricky. They say pro-government forces have used
such agreements in the past to force insurgent-held areas to surrender
and have rounded up men there.
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