Syria Regime Air Raids, Rebel Fire on Damascus Kill 50
إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربيةAt least 37 civilians were killed Wednesday in Syrian government air strikes near Damascus, while at least 13 people died as rebels fired a barrage of rockets into the capital, a monitor said.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said at least four children were among the dead in regime strikes on the rebel-held Eastern Ghouta region, where some 120 people were also wounded.
The death toll was likely to rise further, it said.
The air raids hit the towns of Douma, Saqba, Kafr Batna and Hammouriyeh in the rebel stronghold.
An AFP photographer in Douma saw more than a dozen bodies in makeshift plastic shrouds in a field hospital where medical workers struggled to aid the wounded.
Elsewhere, he also saw two plastic shrouds opened at the top to reveal the faces of two children, their skin yellow and blood-speckled.
Inside a clinic, a young boy wept and hugged his legs -- one roughly bandaged -- as he sat on a blood-smeared floor next to other injured residents.
The strikes came as rebels fired dozens of rockets into Damascus.
The Observatory, without specifying whether the raids or the Damascus attack came first, said at least 13 people, among them 10 civilians, were killed as a barrage of more than 50 rockets slammed into the capital.
It said another 60 people were wounded.
Syria's antiquities director Mamoun Abdulkarim told AFP by telephone from Damascus that rockets had struck near the capital's museum and historic citadel.
"The deputy director in charge of our mosaic pieces, Qassem Yahya, was killed. He was 38," Abdulkarim said.
"Another rocket fell by the museum's entrance and a passerby was killed," the director added.
Syria's state news agency SANA, citing a police source, put the toll at five dead with 55 injured, "most of them children and women."
Rebels often fire into the capital from rear bases on its outskirts, including at times barrages of hundreds of missiles.
Rights groups have condemned indiscriminate rebel rocket fire as amounting to war crimes.
The government regularly carries out air strikes against rebel-held areas on the outskirts of Damascus, particularly Eastern Ghouta, which is also under regime siege.
On Wednesday, Amnesty International accused the government of war crimes against Eastern Ghouta residents, saying heavy aerial bombardment was compounding misery created by the blockade.
More than 240,000 people have been killed in Syria's conflict since it broke out in March 2011, and millions have been forced to flee their homes.
the source is rami abdlerahman's observatory, which has a policy of counting all non-military as civilians. so according to the SOHR, every terrorist killed is a civilian.
also, dear lebjack, why do you ignore this:
"The strikes came as rebels fired dozens of rockets into Damascus, killing at least four people, according to Syria's interior ministry"
so it's okay for terrorists to rain rockets indiscriminately on a city, but it's wrong for that country's army to hit back at terrorists?
@mowaten E-X-C-E-L-L-E-N-T. Still laughing since the day you declared with a straight face you were a shiaa atheist and also a member of hezbollah with only one account. I think i will also continue to laugh at your statement "it is a policy of SOHR to count non-military as civilians". Thank you Thank you
"so it's okay for terrorists to rain rockets indiscriminately on a city, but it's wrong for that country's army to hit back at terrorists?"
Isn't that what your hezbollah did in 2006: firing thousands of rockets indiscriminanetly on Israeli cities? Isn't that what your hezbollah is doing in Syria right now?
justin that's israeli propaganda you're repeating, the fact is that in 2006 HA aimed at, and mainly killed, israeli soldiers, whereas israel aimed at, and mainly killed, lebanese civilians.
according to the iranian paid mouthpiece the Syrian Observatory "has a policy of counting all non-military as civilians. so according to the SOHR, every terrorist killed is a civilian."
but he does not tell us how he became aware of the policy and where it is documented.
so when the Syrian Observatory reports on its website the casualties as follows:
Civilians: 104629 civilians, including 11021 children and 7049 women.
Rebel and Islamic fighters: 37336
Defected soldiers and officers: 2512
It therefore shows it is their policy "of counting all non-military as civilians."...
http://www.syriahr.com/en/2015/04/310000-people-killed-since-the-beginning-of-the-syrian-revolution/
Mowaten you are making the same argument Israel makes when they respond to rocket fire from Gaza. In the UN's view, Assad's response is disproportionate -- Assad can't kill 37 when his casualties were 13.
Amnesty said it had evidence of "war crimes" committed by the government in Eastern Ghouta, and that the regime's siege of the area combined with "unlawful killing of its besieged civilians" amounted to "crimes against humanity."
For many in Eastern Ghouta, life "has become a prolonged experience of hardship and suffering," said Said Boumedouha, acting director of Amnesty's Middle East and North Africa programme.
"By repeatedly bombing heavily populated areas in a series of direct, indiscriminate and disproportionate attacks as well as by unlawfully besieging civilians, Syrian government forces have committed war crimes and displayed a sinister callousness towards Eastern Ghouta's civilians."
Amnesty said it documented at least 60 aerial attacks on Eastern Ghouta in the first half of 2015 that killed around 500 civilians.
http://www.naharnet.com/stories/en/187135-amnesty-regime-committing-war-crimes-in-besieged-syria-area