World

Idlib airstrikes kill at least 27, including Syrian White Helmet volunteer

Multiple airstrikes hit a busy market in a rebel-controlled town in northwestern Syria on Monday, killing at least 27 people and turning several buildings into piles of rubble, according to opposition activists and a war monitor.

Russia's Defence Ministry calls claims it carried out the airstrike for Assad's forces a 'hoax'

Members of the Syrian Civil Defence, also known as the White Helmets, search for bodies or survivors in a collapsed building following a reported airstrike by Syrian regime forces in the town of Kafar Roma in Idlib province Monday. (Abdullah Hammam/AFP/Getty Images)

Multiple airstrikes hit a busy market in a rebel-controlled town in northwestern Syria on Monday, killing at least 27 people and turning several buildings into piles of rubble, according to opposition activists and a war monitor.

Shortly afterward, state media said rebels shelled a government-held village, killing seven.

The high death toll marked a sharp increase in the escalation between the two sides amid intense fighting. Government troops, backed by Russian air cover, try to push their way into the enclave near the Turkish border, which is dominated by al-Qaeda-linked militants and other jihadist groups.

The airstrike in the town of Maaret al-Numan also wounded more than 30 people, according to reports from the region, which has witnessed intensive airstrikes and bombardment almost every day for the past three months.

The strikes came in several rounds and caused widespread destruction, burying several people under the rubble.

Hours after the airstrikes, paramedics were able to remove a little girl alive, rushing her to a nearby ambulance.

Syrian state news agency SANA said insurgents shelled the village of Jourin in the northern part of Hama province, killing seven civilians when a shell hit a moving car. State TV also reported that insurgents shelled the government-held town of Suqailabiyah, wounding four people, including a child, while a shell hit a university in the coastal city of Latakia, a government stronghold, without causing any casualties.

White Helmets gather at the street devastated after the airstrikes. Regime and Russian airstrikes killed at least 43 people and wounded many others in northwest Syria on Monday. (Muhammad Haj Kadour/AFP/Getty Images)

Idlib province, in the northwestern corner of Syria, is the last major rebel stronghold in the country outside the control of President Bashar al-Assad.

Syrian government forces launched their offensive in Idlib province in late April, and fighting has killed more than 2,000 people and displaced hundreds of thousands.

But the troops have made little progress since the push started.

"It is one of the ugliest massacres carried out by Russian warplanes," said opposition activist Hadi Abdallah, speaking on camera from the scene of the airstrike in Maaret al-Numan where destruction appeared widespread.

Volunteer killed

Syrian opposition activists said Russian warplanes carried out Monday's attack, but Russia's Defence Ministry dismissed the reports as a "hoax," adding the Russian air force didn't "carry out any missions in that area in Syria."

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which monitors the fighting on the ground in Syria through a network of activists, said 27 people were killed, including two children, in the strike on Maaret al-Numan. It said the number of casualties from Monday's airstrike was likely to rise due to the large number of wounded.

The Thiqa news agency, an activist collective in northern Syria, gave a higher death toll, saying the strike killed 27 people.

 

A member of the Syrian Civil Defence, also known as White Helmets, said one its colleagues was killed in a second airstrike on the market.

The White Helmets said in a social media post that Amir Al-Bunni was the 267th volunteer to die since fighting in Syria erupted nine years ago. The group said he had rejoined them after being displaced from his hometown some 300 kilometres away.

On Sunday, government bombing in Idlib killed at least 11 civilians, according to the observatory and first responders.

Despite the bombardment, Assad's troops have been unable to make any significant advances against the rebels or the al-Qaeda-linked militants and other jihadi groups that dominate Idlib province. Militant groups have hit back hard, killing an average of more than a dozen soldiers and allied militiamen a day in recent weeks.

The struggling campaign underscores the limits of Syria's and Russia's airpower, and inability to achieve a definitive victory in the country's long-running civil war.

In neighbouring Turkey, Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said Ankara would launch a new offensive into northern Syria if a so-called "safe zone" is not established and if threats against Turkey continue from the region.

Cavusoglu made the comments on Monday as a delegation led by the U.S. special representative on Syria, James Jeffrey, was to hold talks in Ankara. The possible safe zone along the border with Turkey was expected to be on the agenda.

Turkey views Kurdish fighters who have fought alongside the United States against the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) as terrorists, and wants the safe zone established to keep the fighters away from the border. It has recently been sending troop reinforcement to its border region.

Cavusoglu said Turkey would intervene "if there's no safe zone and if the terrorists are not cleared and continue to pose a threat."