Syrian opposition calls for help amid Mideast snow storm

Al-MARJ, Lebanon — Syria's main Western-backed opposition group Thursday appealed to the international community to help Syrian refugees and internally displaced people suffering amid a snowstorm that struck the region this week, killing at least five people.

The wintry weather, which swooped across much of the Mideast on Tuesday, mostly silenced the guns in Syria and grounded government warplanes because of bad visibility. It killed three Syrians in Lebanon and two in the northern Syrian city of Aleppo on Wednesday, according to Lebanese security officials and Syrian activists.

The Syrian National Coalition's interim premier, Ahmad Touma, said in Istanbul on Thursday that the situation on the ground is "catastrophic" because of low temperatures and lack of tents in refugee camps.

Touma said that over the past two months alone, some 2,000 families have fled the violence and that 800 of them are without shelter.

"The storm has bad effects and good ones," said Beibares Tellawi, an activist in the besieged neighborhood of Waer in the central Syrian city of Homs. "We have no blankets, no heating but the regime stopped its airstrikes."

Another prominent opposition figure, Suhair Atassi, added her appeal for aid from "countries that are friendly to the Syrian people."

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