‘Heaviest raids in Syria since warplanes deployed’
BY AFP31 Oct 2012 5:09 AM IST
AFP31 Oct 2012 5:09 AM IST
The Syrian military launched on Monday the heaviest air strikes seen in the country since warplanes were first deployed over the summer, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said. ‘There have been 48 air raids across the country over four hours this morning. These are the heaviest air strikes since warplanes were first deployed over the summer,’ the watchdog’s director Rami Abdel Rahman said. ‘The regime is looking to make real gains. There are battles in all of these areas being hit,’ said Abdel Rahman. The Britain-based Observatory reported 11 air raids on villages and towns across the northwestern province of Idlib, where regime forces and rebels have been locked in fierce fighting over the Wadi Daif military base. According to the Observatory, two men were killed and dozens wounded in the Idlib strikes, ‘and the number of dead is likely to rise due to the presence of severe injuries’. The bombardments came on the final day of the Muslim feast of Eid al-Adha, after a failed bid to halt the country’s violence by UN-Arab League envoy Lakhdar Brahimi. Warplanes struck at least 11 targets in Damascus, the Observatory said, with attacks focused on rebel positions in a northeastern belt of the capital where the regime has been battling to take over opposition strongholds.
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