Oman Daily Observer

Syria’s deadliest September claims 3,000 lives

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BEIRUT: Syria’s war killed at least 3,000 people including 955 civilians in September, the deadliest month of the conflict this year, the Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights monitor said on Sunday.

Hundreds of thousands of Syrians have been killed and millions displaced since the war erupted in 2011 with the repression of anti-government protests.

It has since spiralled into a complex conflict involving world powers, with Russia-backed Syrian forces and a USsupporte­d alliance separately battling the IS group in the country.

The 955 civilians killed in September included 207 children, said the Britain-based Observator­y, which relies on a wide network of sources inside Syria for its informatio­n.

“More than 70 per cent of the civilians were killed in Syrian and Russian air strikes, or in air raids of the internatio­nal coalition fighting IS,” the monitor’s head Rami Abdel Rahman said. Backed by Russian air strikes, the forces of Syria’s President Bashar al Assad are pressing a battle to retake IS-controlled areas in the eastern province of Deir Ezzor.

A US-led internatio­nal coalition has been providing air support to a Kurdish-Arab alliance, the Syrian Democratic Forces, also fighting the militants in their former northern bastion of Raqa city and in Deir Ezzor.

The number of people killed in September was higher because of increased fighting and “intensifie­d air raids of the internatio­nal coalition and Russia against militant bastions in the north and east of Syria, but also due to increased Russian and Syrian strikes on rebel-held areas,” Abdel Rahman said. Russian and Syrian warplanes have in the past two weeks increased their strikes on the northweste­rn province of Idlib, which is largely controlled by Hayat Tahrir al Sham (HTS), a group led by al Qaeda’s former Syria affiliate.

Eight children were among at least 34 civilians killed in strikes overnight on Friday-Saturday on the town of Armanaz in Idlib, the Observator­y said. HTS is not party to a deal brokered by Russia, Turkey and Iran for a safe zone in the province, one of four such zones nationwide.

The Observator­y said September toll also included the 790 Syrian troops and loyalists, 738 militants from IS and HTS, and 550 rebels and SDF members.

Syria’s conflict has killed more than 330,000 people since 2011.

Early on Sunday, IS retook the town of Al Qaryatain in the central province of Homs, previously a symbol of religious coexistenc­e.

Government troops have now surrounded Al Qaryatain, where several families are believed to be living, the Observator­y said.

Syrian forces recaptured Qaryatain in April 2016 after months of IS control.

In August 2015, IS abducted 270 Christians from the town, transporti­ng them around 90 km away deep into the Syria desert and then locking them up in an undergroun­d dungeon. They were freed 25 days later.

The same month, IS ravaged a monastery in the town and reduced a fifth-century mud brick church to rubble with explosives and bulldozers.

Earlier last week, the militants launched an assault on government positions in Syria’s vast Badiya desert, killing at least 128 Syrian troops.

Russia-backed Syrian troops have been battling for months to retake the Badiya, which stretches from the country’s centre to the Iraqi and Jordanian borders and has been held by IS since 2014. Last month, they broke a years-long IS siege of government enclaves in the eastern city of Deir Ezzor. Al eight

 ?? — Reuters ?? A view of Raqa’s National Hospital, last stronghold of the IS militants.
— Reuters A view of Raqa’s National Hospital, last stronghold of the IS militants.

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