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68 killed in Syria attacks as more people flee

AP  |  Beirut 

and Russian airstrikes killed at least 46 people in a besieged town outside of today, while Turkish shelling and attacks on a Kurdish-held town in left at least 22 dead there, monitors and officials said.

The staggering death toll - at least 68 civilians - killed came a day after passed the seven-year mark in its relentless civil

In Damascus' rebel-held enclave of eastern Ghouta, Syrian and Russian jets struck the town of with cluster bombs, napalm-like incendiary weapons, and conventional explosives, the for Human Rights said.

The assault was part of an indiscriminate campaign by Bashar Assad's forces to retake the town and the rest of the enclave from the rebels.

A medical charity supporting in the Ghouta region, the Syrian American Medical Society, said doctors in were treating patients for severe burn wounds. The charity said it recorded 40 casualties on Friday. The group said it identified 42 bodies so far.

Oways al-Shami, a for Syrian Civil Defense, also known as the White Helmets, said he expected the toll to rise further. "Most of the (bodies) were charred," he said.

Exhausted and shell-shocked civilians streamed out of eastern Ghouta for the second consecutive day to buses arranged by the government to take them to a center for identification and relief.

A man interviewed on state-affiliated al-Ikhbariya TV said he had gone two days without Others said rebels hoarded and humiliated civilians, even shooting people trying to leave.

The UN has warned of a crisis in eastern Ghouta, which human rights groups have blamed on the government's strangling blockade.

said close to 5,000 civilians have been evacuated today, after more than 10,000 left the enclave the before.

The assault on eastern Ghouta has devastated towns across the region and damaged and destroyed over a dozen At least 1,300 civilians have been killed under shelling and airstrikes.

Russia's said the Russian and the would extend a "cease-fire" in Damascus' rebel-held suburbs as long as it takes to allow all the civilians to leave the area.

In northern Syria, where Kurdish officials Turkish shelling and airstrikes killed at least 22 civilians on Friday in the town of Afrin, the Turkish urged civilians to leave and the Syrian Kurdish militiamen to surrender to besieging Turkish forces.

The for the Syrian Democratic Forces, a Kurdish-led and US-backed force that operates in the Kurdish autonomous region in the north, said also that at least 30 were wounded in Friday's attacks.

Victims lay dead the streets in pools of blood, according to a video from the Observatory, which monitors Syria's seven-year civil and which put the death toll at 18. Different casualty tolls are common in the immediate aftermath of big attacks.

Since their January offensive began, Turkish forces have nearly encircled in an effort to drive the Syrian Kurdish fighters from the town and the surrounding region. Residents say they are facing bread, water, and

and activists reported seeing hundreds of civilians filing out of to neighboring villages on Thursday and Friday, looking for relief. Tens of thousands of civilians are believed to still be inside.

Earlier, Turkish aircraft dropped flyers in Arabic and Kurdish on Afrin, asking residents to stay away from "terrorist positions" a reference to the Syrian Kurdish fighters and to not let themselves be used as "human shields."

The leaflets claimed that civilians desiring to flee would be guaranteed safety by the Turkish and urged Syrian Kurdish fighters to "trust the hand we extend to you." "Come surrender! A calm and peaceful future awaits you in Afrin," the leaflets read.

Thursday saw the largest single-day exodus of civilians in Syria's civil The government offensive has pushed further into eastern Ghouta, chipping away at one of the largest and most significant opposition bastions since the early days of the rebellion communities where some 400,000 people are estimated to be holed up.

Since mid-February, Syrian troops have targeted Damascus' sprawling suburbs with shells, airstrikes and, at times, even toxic gas, according to opposition medics. They are now in control of the majority of the enclave that had been in rebel hands since 2012.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, March 16 2018. 20:05 IST
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