Regime and allies continue to pound Damascus's Ghouta a day after gas attacks

Syrian flee their homes following an airstrike in the rebel-held besieged town of Arbin, in the eastern Ghouta region on the outskirts of the capital Damascus on February 2, 2018. (AFP)
Updated 06 February 2018
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Regime and allies continue to pound Damascus's Ghouta a day after gas attacks

BEIRUT: Syrian regime air strikes on Eastern Ghouta killed at least 16 civilians on Tuesday, a monitor said, the latest in a string of deadly attacks on the rebel-held enclave near Damascus.
“There were 16 killed, two of them children, in intensive air raids carried out by the regime against several regions of Eastern Ghouta,” the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.
“The casualty toll could rise because there are people stuck under the rubble and several wounded in a critical condition,” Rami Abdel Rahman, the head of the Britain-based group, said.
The latest bloodshed came a day after strikes and shelling killed at least 31 civilians in the area, which has been besieged by government forces since 2013.
Several children were among Monday’s dead.
The raids also came after a heated exchange between the United States and Russia at the United Nations over the reported use of chemical weapons by President Bashar Assad’s regime.
Regime or allied forces have fired suspected chlorine-filled munitions on targets in Eastern Ghouta on several occasions in recent weeks, sparking US warnings of military action.
Russia, Assad’s main backer, retorted that “no perpetrators have been identified” and accused the United States of orchestrating a “propaganda campaign” against the Syrian government.


UN urges Middle East warring parties to ‘give peace a chance’

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UN urges Middle East warring parties to ‘give peace a chance’

  • The United Nations rights chief called on Friday for cool heads to prevail in the Middle East and urged the warring sides to pull back and give peace a chance
GENEVA: The United Nations rights chief called on Friday for cool heads to prevail in the Middle East and urged the warring sides to pull back and give peace a chance.
“The world urgently needs to see steps to contain and extinguish this blaze — but instead we are only seeing more inflammatory, bellicose rhetoric, more bombings, more destruction, killings and escalation, that fuels it further,” Volker Turk told reporters.
“I urge the states involved to take immediate steps to de-escalate, to give peace a chance. And on other states to call clearly on those involved to pull back. Cool heads must prevail if we are to prevent further terror and devastation for civilians.”