Shelling, air raids kill 29 in Syria: NGO

A boy sits on a damaged street filled with debris in Harasta area in Damascus. Our fickle minds paralyse us into inaction, says the writer.

A boy sits on a damaged street filled with debris in Harasta area in Damascus. Our fickle minds paralyse us into inaction, says the writer.

Published Jul 15, 2013

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 Beirut - Shelling and air raids by Syrian government forces against a string of villages in the northwestern province of Idlib killed at least 29 people, a watchdog said on Monday.

The military carried out five separate strikes, including a rocket attack on the village of Maghara that killed 13 people, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.

The attacks all came shortly before Sunday's Iftar, the evening meal at which Muslims break their daytime Ramadaan fast, according to the Britain-based group, which relies on a network of activists, lawyers and doctors on the ground across Syria.

The attack in Maghara was the deadliest, but the Observatory also reported six killed in the village of Al-Bara, four in Basamis, three in Kfar Nabl in an air strike and three in Iblin.

The dead included at least eight women and six children, the Observatory said.

Video footage posted online by activists showed harrowing scenes of death and destruction, including fires started by what they said was the rocket strike on Maghara.

The screams of survivors were heard as the camera panned over the rubble.

“God is great. Where are our Muslim brothers? Where are our Arab brothers?” the activist says as he films residents trying to dig out people trapped beneath the wreckage of their homes.

“This is the Iftar of the Muslims in Jabal Zawiya,” he said, referring to the hill district where the village lies.

“A massacre in the village of Maghara.”

A second video showed smoke billowing over the village and residents lifting a dust-covered older man, his stomach torn open, onto a flat-bed truck.

Another man lay dead on the ground, his body and clothes covered in grey dust flecked with blood, his mouth open, his arm curled upwards and his hand lying on his chest.

Residents scooped water into bowls and buckets to try to put out the fires.

The Observatory also reported that at least 13 people were killed in Damascus province on Sunday night, when a car bomb exploded outside a police station in the town of Deir Attiya.

At least 10 policemen and three civilians were killed in the attack, the group said.

Meanwhile, government forces pressed an assault on the Damascus district of Qaboon, where they are trying to dislodge a rebel rear-base.

The Observatory said at least 18 people were killed in the northeastern district on Sunday - three civilians and 15 rebels.

Hundreds of families had been trapped in the area as troops attacked rebel positions.

Nationwide, at least 129 people were killed on Sunday - 70 civilians, 31 rebels and 28 government troops, the Observatory said. - Sapa-AFP

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