Foes blast away in Syria city

8-day toll put at 200; fear rises for besieged civilians

People in Aleppo, Syria, are surrounded by rubble after unrelenting airstrikes.
People in Aleppo, Syria, are surrounded by rubble after unrelenting airstrikes.

DAMASCUS, Syria -- The Syrian army and rebels unleashed deadly new attacks Friday in Aleppo, with insurgents shelling a mosque during weekly prayers and government airstrikes hitting opposition neighborhoods.

photo

AP

People seek shelter Friday after airstrikes in Aleppo, Syria, where insurgents shelled a mosque in a government-held neighborhood, while deadly government airstrikes hit rebel-held parts of Syria’s largest city.

The U.N. decried the escalating bloodshed as a "monstrous disregard for civilian lives by all parties."

More than 200 people have been killed in eight days of mounting violence in and around the contested northern city, including 15 at the Malla Khan mosque hit by rebel rockets and another 10 from government warplanes and helicopters, officials said.

The surge in fighting has collapsed a two-month cease-fire brokered by the U.S. and Russia. It also has raised fears of an all-out government assault on Aleppo and warnings of a humanitarian disaster in the 5-year-old civil war.

Syrian officials have not given details of the apparent offensive on Aleppo, the nation's largest city and a strategic prize for both the government and rebel forces opposing President Bashar Assad.

In rebel-held neighborhoods, medical facilities, bakeries and a water station have been pounded by a government bombardment, residents say. Electricity is down to a few hours a week. A single road out of Aleppo is the only supply line for the insurgent-controlled districts, where an estimated 250,000 people remain. If forces loyal to Assad take the road, there could be shortages of food and medicines.

"People have already started fleeing the city," said Baraa al-Halaby, an activist who watched older men, women and children leave his rebel-held neighborhood Friday. "If Aleppo comes under siege, people will starve to death within a month."

Assad's military declared a brief truce for today in the capital, Damascus, and its outskirts and the coastal province of Latakia -- but not in Aleppo.

It was not immediately clear what effect the truce declaration would have.

The cease-fire took effect at 1 a.m. in Damascus, according to an announcement on Syrian state TV. The military said it will last 24 hours in Damascus and its suburbs and three days in Latakia.

escalation feared

Syria's largest city and its commercial center before the war, Aleppo has been divided between the two camps. Now it is once more the main battleground after peace talks stalled in Geneva.

"The situation is getting worse," said Ameen al-Halabi, an activist in Aleppo.

Zeid Raad al-Hussein, the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights, said the latest fighting showed a "monstrous disregard for civilian lives by all parties to the conflict."

"There are deeply disturbing reports of military buildups indicating preparations for a lethal escalation," al-Hussein said in a statement released in Geneva

Al-Hussein urged the sides to step back from a return to all-out war.

"In short, the violence is soaring back to the levels we saw prior to the cessation of hostilities. There are deeply disturbing reports of military buildups indicating preparations for a lethal escalation," he said.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry discussed ways to resolve the Syrian conflict through the "preservation and strengthening" of the Feb. 27 cease-fire, the provision of humanitarian assistance to people living in blocked areas and the establishment of a sustainable political process, the Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

Lavrov again stressed the need for the full participation of Syrian Kurds in the talks, as well as for the disengagement of the moderate opposition from groups considered to be terrorist organizations.

U.S. State Department spokesman Mark Toner said the two "talked about the cessation of hostilities; about some of the efforts that are underway; about the reinforcement of that cessation of hostilities in parts of Syria; and also about the political negotiation track as well."

prayers suspended

After a brief lull overnight, government airstrikes resumed Friday morning on rebel-held areas. At least 10 people died and dozens were wounded, according to the Local Coordination Committees and Bibars Mishal, a volunteer with the first-response Civil Defense Teams in Aleppo. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a Britain-based group that monitors the conflict, put the death toll at 11.

The rebel rockets struck the Malla Khan mosque after noon in the government-held Bab al-Faraj districts, killing 15 and wounding 30, state TV reported.

In opposition areas, air raids prompted religious leaders to suspend the collective Friday prayers in mosques for the first time.

"The heart of the believers is aching ... but preserving lives is an important religious duty," the Religious Council of Aleppo, an opposition body that runs religious affairs, said in an online statement.

Government airstrikes have heavily damaged infrastructure in opposition neighborhoods. A main hospital supported by Doctors Without Borders was bombed late Wednesday, and the death toll from that attack rose Friday to more than 50, according to the medical charity. Among the dead were patients and at least six staff members, including one of Aleppo's remaining pediatricians.

The hospital was one of the few standing medical centers in Aleppo and offered pediatric and cardiology wards.

A clinic was damaged Friday in the neighborhood of al-Marj, but there were no casualties, said two opposition monitoring groups. A water-distribution point in Bab al-Nairab was damaged Wednesday, depriving four neighborhoods of drinking water, said Mishal, the civil-defense volunteer. He called eight days of government airstrikes "vicious, vicious, vicious."

A third medical center in the Bustan al-Qasr neighborhood was bombed shortly before dark Friday, destroying the facility. No one was at the clinic at the time, but three bystanders were killed.

Doctors Without Borders said it was "desperately" worried that people in rebel-held areas of Aleppo are in danger of being cut off from medical care.

"The sky is falling in Aleppo," said Muskilda Zancada, head of the charity's Syria mission. "The city, consistently at the front lines of this brutal war, is now in danger of coming under a full offensive. No corner is being spared. Attacks on hospitals and medical staff are a devastating indicator of how the war in Syria is waged, one of numerous brutal ways in which civilians are targeted."

Zancada said the city "is already a shell of what it once was," and the latest assault appears determined to eliminate even that.

According to the Observatory, airstrikes and shelling in Aleppo killed 202 civilians in the past week, including 31 children on both sides. Syrian state TV reported that 85 people were killed and more than 600 wounded in government-held areas alone in the past week.

On Thursday, Russia's Foreign Ministry denied that the Kremlin had launched any airstrikes in the past few days, despite carrying out air raids in the past. Russia on Friday also blamed the al-Qaida-linked Jabhat al-Nusra for a mortar attack on its abandoned consulate in Aleppo.

In Berlin, meanwhile, German government spokesman Steffen Seibert directly blamed Syrian forces Friday, accusing Assad's troops of "blatant violation of humanitarian law" for the hospital strike and other attacks.

Rights groups have blamed Assad's forces for hundreds of attacks on medical facilities and workers over the course of the five-year conflict.

The World Health Organization and UNICEF, the U.N. children's rights agency, said Friday that such attacks are clear violations of international law.

"We are outraged at the alarming frequency of attacks on health personnel and facilities in Syria," the WHO and UNICEF said in a joint statement.

"They deserve greater protection," the statement said of Syria's medical workers. "Thousands of lives are at stake."

Information for this article was contributed by Albert Aji, Bassem Mroue, Sarah El Deeb, Lynn Berry and Matthew Lee of The Associated Press and by Erin Cunningham and Brian Murphy of The Washington Post.

A Section on 04/30/2016

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