BFF-54 Syria strikes kill 11 civilians after jihadist attack: monitor

556

ZCZC

BFF-54

SYRIA-CONFLICT-IDLIB

Syria strikes kill 11 civilians after jihadist attack: monitor

BEIRUT, June 10, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Eleven Syrian civilians were killed on
Sunday in regime strikes in the country’s northwest, a monitor said, in
apparent retaliation for a jihadist attack on two besieged government-held
villages.

The bombing raids hit a string of towns and villages in the northwest
province of Idlib, which is almost entirely controlled by various jihadist
and hardline rebels.

“Nine civilians, including three children, were killed in the raids on the
town of Taftanaz,” said the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human
Rights.

Observatory head Rami Abdel Rahman said strikes had also hit near a
children’s hospital, putting it out of service.

Two more civilians, including a child, were killed in other raids nearby.

The air strikes came a day after jihadists from Al-Qaeda’s former Syrian
affiliate launched an attack on Fuaa and Kafraya, two villages held by the
regime but cut off by hardline forces. Late Saturday, Hayat Tahrir al-Sham
(HTS) and allied fighters shelled Fuaa and Kafraya heavily and clashed with
local fighters.

“This is the fiercest attack in around three years,” said Abdel Rahman.

Six Syrian pro-regime fighters and at least three from HTS were killed in
the fighting, which continued on Sunday.

Syrian state news agency SANA also reported Saturday’s attack, and said
local fighters were able to push back the jihadists.

Fuaa and Kafraya are the only two places in Syria currently designated as
besieged by the United Nations after the government recaptured the Yarmuk
Palestinian camp in southern Damascus.

The villages are home to an estimated 8,100 people, most of them Shiite
Muslims.

They came under siege in 2015, when rebels ousted regime forces from a vast
majority of Idlib province.

Since then, the mainstream opposition’s influence has dwindled as jihadists
solidified their grip on the province, and regime forces have recaptured an
eastern sliver of Idlib.

HTS and its allies control around 60 percent of the province, its local
rivals hold about a third, and the regime controls about 10 percent,
according to the Observatory.

Now, even the Islamic State group is conducting hit-and-run attacks in
Idlib against its HTS rival.

Last week, clashes between HTS and an IS sleeper cell made up of Iraqi
jihadists left more than two dozen fighters dead, mostly from IS.

In retaliation, the IS cell executed five HTS fighters it had abducted in
Idlib, the Observatory said. HTS also killed six IS members it had captured
in the clashes.

Siege tactics have been used throughout Syria’s seven-year conflict, mostly
by the government.

Troops have employed the tactic alongside heavy bombing to cut off food and
medicine to rebel-held areas, then coerce people to agree to leave in
population transfers.

Idlib, which lies on the border with Turkey, has seen its population
balloon to around two million people in recent years as fighters and
civilians evacuated from other opposition areas are dumped there.

It was designated last year as a de-escalation zone, but violence has been
creeping up again.

BSS/AFP/ARS/1936 hrs