Syria, Russia
pound rebel enclave, put clinic out of service
ARBIN, Syria, Feb. 21 (AFP) - Syrian and Russian air strikes on the rebel-held Eastern Ghouta enclave have killed more than 100 civilians for the second straight day and put another hospital out of service.
ARBIN, Syria, Feb. 21 (AFP) - Syrian and Russian air strikes on the rebel-held Eastern Ghouta enclave have killed more than 100 civilians for the second straight day and put another hospital out of service.
In a major
development in Syria's complex seven-year war, Damascus also sent pro-regime
fighters to the northern Afrin region, where they came under fire by Turkish
forces attacking the Kurdish-controlled enclave.
On the outskirts
of Damascus, air strikes, rockets and artillery fire have been battering the
Eastern Ghoutaenclave in apparent preparation for a government ground assault.
At least 250
civilians have been killed since the escalation began on Sunday, among them
dozens of children, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.
Bombardment on
Tuesday killed 106 civilians, including 19 children, the Britain-based war
monitor said.
It was the
second straight day that the civilian death toll topped 100, after 127 were
killed Monday in Eastern Ghouta's bloodiest day in four years. The strikes left
an important hospital out of action, further limiting the little medical aid
that besieged civilians can access.
"The Arbin
hospital was hit twice today and is now out of service," said Mousa Naffa,
country director in Jordan for the Syrian American Medical Society (SAMS),
which supported the clinic.
The Observatory
blamed Russian warplanes, saying Moscow carried out its first strikes in three
months on Eastern Ghouta.
The rebel-held
region is nominally included in a "de-escalation" deal meant to tamp
down violence, but President Bashar al-Assad appears to be preparing troops for
a ground assault to retake it.
UN
Secretary-General Antonio Guterres was "deeply alarmed by the escalating
situation in Eastern Ghouta and its devastating impact on civilians," said
spokesman Stephane Dujarric.
US State
Department spokeswoman Heather Nauert criticised the "siege and starve
tactics" of the Assad regime and said: "The cessation of violence
must begin now."
- Six hospitals
hit -
Eastern Ghouta
is home to more than 400,000 people living under crippling government siege,
with little access to food or medical resources.
The United
Nations said six hospitals had been hit in the region in the past 48 hours, in
addition to the one in Arbin. At least three were out of service and two were
only partially functioning, said the UN's regional humanitarian coordinator for
Syria, Panos Moumtzis.
"It's
beyond imagination what is happening in East Ghouta today," he said.
"The untold suffering is intolerable and residents have no idea whether
they will live or die. This nightmare in East Ghouta must end and must end
now."
Hours before the
Arbin hospital was bombed, a doctor there spoke of the casualties they had been
treating.
"February
19 was... one of the worst days that we've ever had in the history of this
crisis," Abu al-Yasar told AFP. He described treating a one-year-old with
blue skin and a faint pulse, rescued from under the rubble.
"I opened
his mouth to put in a breathing tube and I found it packed with dirt,"
said Abu al-Yasar. He pulled out the dirt as fast as possible, put in the
breathing tube and managed to save the baby. "This is just one story from
among hundreds of wounded."
- 'No words' -
The bloodshed
prompted the UN children's agency UNICEF to issue a largely blank statement
saying "we no longer have the words to describe children's
suffering."
Syria's main
opposition group condemned the government onslaught as a "bloodbath"
and a "war crime", saying it may pull out of UN-backed peace talks in
protest.
Eastern Ghouta
is mostly held by two hardline rebel groups that often fire rockets and mortar
rounds into residential neighbourhoods of east Damascus. On Tuesday, at least
nine people were killed and 49 wounded by rebel fire on the capital, state
media reported.
Al-Watan
newspaper, which is close to the government, said the bombing campaign
"comes ahead of a vast operation on Ghouta, which may start on the ground
at any moment."
The army already
waged a ferocious five-day air assault on Eastern Ghouta earlier this month
that left around 250 civilians dead and hundreds wounded.
- Turkey shells
regime -
Syria's conflict
erupted in 2011 with protests against Assad, but the ensuing war has carved the
country into various zones of control among rebels, jihadists, the regime, and
Kurds.
Turkey has been
waging an air and ground offensive against the Kurdish People's Protection
Units (YPG) militia in the Afrin enclave for the past month but on Tuesday the
stakes were ratcheted up.
Hundreds of
Syrian pro-government forces entered the region for the first time since 2012
to face off against Turkey alongside Kurdish forces that Ankara views as an
offshoot of its own internal insurgency.
But they quickly
came under shelling by Turkish forces, who said they had fired "warning
shots" at the "pro-regime terrorist groups". In a statement, YPG
spokesman Nuri Mahmud said the Kurdish forces had called on the Damascus
government to help fend off Turkey's assault.
"The Syrian
government responded to the invitation, answered the call of duty and sent
military units today, February 20, to take up positions on the borders, and
participate in defending the territorial unity of Syria and its borders,"
the statement said. The YPG has controlled Afrin since government forces
withdrew from Kurdish-majority northern areas in 2012
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