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WAR REPORT
Bombings, clashes as Syria opposition seeks arms
by Staff Writers
Damascus (AFP) Sept 3, 2012


Syria warplane kills 18 in single attack: watchdog
Beirut (AFP) Sept 3, 2012 - A Syrian warplane bombed a building in the northern rebel-held town of Al-Bab in Aleppo province on Monday, killing at least 10 men, six women and two children, a watchdog said.

Violence also flared in the capital Damascus, where rebels said they are going back on the offensive after being pushed back by regime forces, and in the northwestern province of Idlib, where four troops were killed in clashes, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

Among the dead in the Al-Bab strike were a girl and a boy, Rami Abdel Rahman, director of Britain-based Observatory, told AFP. "They died when the fighter jet bombed the building where they were sheltered.

The Syrian Revolution General Commission, a network of activists on the ground, said the toll was likely to rise.

"There are still people stuck in the rubble but nobody can go and help them because the aerial attacks have not ceased," it said.

The airstrike on Al-Bab followed a series of attacks on towns and villages in the Aleppo countryside, as regime forces fight to break rebel supply lines into the city.

The army also pounded several districts of the city of Aleppo, the Observatory said, more than six weeks after the start of what President Bashar al-Assad's regime warned would be "the mother of all battles" in Syria's commercial hub.

State news agency SANA said on Monday that "our brave armed forces continued to pursue terrorists... who sustained heavy losses," adding that the army "seized large quantities of arms and ammunition" from the rebels on the outskirts of Aleppo city.

The army, SANA said, destroyed a number of pick-up trucks equipped with heavy machine guns at Kafr al-Hamra, "at the northern entrance of Aleppo, while terrorists tried to enter the city."

In Damascus, army shelling killed a man and a woman and injured their child in the southern district of Al-Hajar Al-Aswad, according to the Observatory.

Although fighting in Damascus reached its peak mid-summer, violence has persisted as the army attempts to root out pockets of rebel resistance from key districts.

Fighting in the eastern Ghuta area of the province of Damascus raged on Monday, said the spokesman for the rebel Free Syrian Army's Military Council in Damascus.

"The FSA is still relying on hit-and-run tactics, but it has moved on to being on the offensive," Ahmed al-Khatib told AFP via Skype.

"The FSA's mobility in Damascus has increased, and its battalions have a high capacity to penetrate the security forces now," Khatib said.

The Ahfad al-Rasul (grandchildren of the prophet) rebel group meanwhile claimed responsibility for a bombing attack on central Damascus on Sunday, and said the bombs were planted by members of the security forces who had been "bribed" by the rebels.

Fighting in the northwestern province of Idlib saw four regime troops killed and two army vehicles destroyed, the Observatory said.

The watchdog in a very preliminary toll said 38 people were killed nationwide on Monday, 20 of them civilians. It added that 132 people died in violence on Sunday.

More than 26,000 people have died in Syria since the outbreak of an anti-regime revolt in March last year, according to Observatory figures.

The army's crackdown on dissent was so brutal that, several months after it began, the uprising transformed into an armed insurgency.

A deadly car bomb tore through a mainly Christian Damascus suburb Monday while Syrian warplanes pounded Aleppo province, killing dozens of people, as the opposition pleaded for arms and intervention.

The violence came as the head of the Red Cross travelled to Damascus on a humanitarian mission and CIA chief David Petraeus visited Turkey for talks expected to focus on the Syrian crisis.

Among those killed in the latest bloodshed was an entire family -- including seven children -- when a government air raid hit their home in the heart of Aleppo, witnesses told an AFP correspondent in Syria's second city.

The bodies of the children were laid out under fly-ridden blankets in the back of a yellow pick-up truck outside a hospital before a hurried funeral, the correspondent reported.

"This is all one family," said tailor Hassan Dalati, who survived the raid on Al-Sultan Street in the city of 2.7 million people.

A fighter jet also struck in nearby Al-Bab, killing at least 18 people, with more unaccounted for beneath the rubble of flattened homes, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said. Doctors said nine people died.

The dawn raid on a building being used as a shelter followed repeated overflights by military aircraft during the night, residents said.

"We were sleeping at home when the first bomb struck. I made a run for the door when a second blast buried me," said a barely conscious survivor, peppered with shrapnel from head to foot.

The army also pounded Aleppo city, the Observatory said, more than five weeks after the start of what President Bashar al-Assad's regime warned would be "the mother of all battles" for the commercial hub.

A senior commander in charge of the regime offensive on Aleppo told AFP that the army would recapture the northern city from the rebel forces "within 10 days."

Some 3,000 troops were involved in the fight against about 7,000 "terrorists," said the general, adding that 2,000 of the insurgents had been killed since the assault on Aleppo was launched at the start of August.

The Observatory gave an updated toll of at least 138 people killed across Syria on Monday -- 78 of them civilians -- after 132 people died in violence the previous day.

The watchdog, which has a network of activists on the ground, also reported that a car bomb ripped through the mainly Christian and Druze suburb of Jaramana on Monday, killing at least five people.

Another 27 people were wounded in the blast, it said, adding that the attack struck the area of Al-Wehdeh on the edges of Jaramana.

The southeastern suburb was previously hit by a car bomb on August 28, when at least 27 people attending a funeral for two supporters of the Damascus regime were killed.

"There is an increase of the use of car bombs in Syria," the Observatory's Rami Abdel Rahman told AFP.

-- SNC wants arms, intervention --

In Madrid, the opposition Syrian National Council appealed to the international community for weapons and urgent military intervention to defend civilians from such attacks.

"We need a humanitarian intervention and we are asking for military intervention for the Syrian civilians," SNC chairman Abdel Basset Sayda said. "I have the duty of asking for weapons that will allow us to defend against the Syrian armour and weapons."

Sayda said the conflict had now killed 30,000 people and forced millions from their homes, including more than three million displaced inside the country and 250,000 who had fled abroad. Another 100,000 had been detained.

According to the Observatory, more than 26,000 people have been killed in Syria since the revolt began in March last year -- more than two-thirds of them civilians.

The plight of refugees is expected to be among the top priorities of Peter Maurer, the president of the International Committee of the Red Cross who travelled to Damascus on Monday for a three-day visit.

Maurer would "discuss pressing humanitarian issues" during meetings on Tuesday with President Assad, Foreign Minister Walid Muallem and other ministers, the ICRC said.

"At a time when more and more civilians are being exposed to extreme violence, it is of the utmost importance that we and the Syrian Arab Red Crescent succeed in significantly scaling up our humanitarian response," said Maurer.

Damascus said late Sunday that new UN-Arab League envoy Lakhdar Brahimi would soon travel to Damascus, without providing a date, while expressing confidence "he will listen to us."

But Brahimi gave a deeply pessimistic view of the task ahead of him, in an interview with the BBC.

"I know how difficult it is -- how nearly impossible. I can't say impossible -- (it is) nearly impossible," he said.

Syrian Information Minister Omran al-Zohbi said Brahimi's success depended on states such as Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Qatar.

"The success of Lakhdar Brahimi does not depend on Syria," said Zohbi.

"Brahimi's success depends on certain states -- such as Qatar, Saudi Arabia and Turkey -- respecting his mission, by closing their borders to armed men, and by ceasing to provide weapons," he added.

In Ankara, a US official told AFP that CIA director Petraeus was in Turkey for regional meetings, without elaborating.

His visit comes less than two weeks after Turkish and US officials held their first operational planning meetings aimed at bringing an end to the Assad regime.

burs/dv/kir

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