Assault death toll in Aleppo at 401, Syrian group says

A Syrian walks in the rubble of buildings damaged in Aleppo by government forces in photo take Monday by the Aleppo Media Center.
A Syrian walks in the rubble of buildings damaged in Aleppo by government forces in photo take Monday by the Aleppo Media Center.

BEIRUT - A Syrian human-rights group said more than 400 people have been killed during a government bombardment of rebel-held areas of the northern city of Aleppo, and more than one-quarter of the victims are children.

Rami Abdurrahman of the British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said Wednesday that the group counted 401 people killed in 11 continuous days of government bombing of Syria’s largest city and its province, including 117 children.

Abdurrahman said the toll is one of the highest, and with the most civilian casualties, of any government assault in Syria’s three-year conflict.

The toll is so high because the government was hurling imprecisely aimed, explosive-laden barrels over residential areas, he said.

The Observatory bases its information on a network of activists on the ground.

Other rights groups have given much higher casualty numbers.

The government has not commented on its use of the so-called barrel bombs, nor on why it began intensely targeting Aleppo. The attack comes weeks before an international conference is expected to unite Syria’s government and opposition groups seeking to overturn the rule of President Bashar Assad.

Analysts say the attack may be an attempt to bully civilians to expel rebels from parts of the city they seized last July.

Also Wednesday, Syria’s state news agency said the Oil Ministry has signed a deal with Russian oil and gas company Soyuzneftegaz to explore in the Mediterranean Sea, in a boost to the war-ravaged country’s economic fortunes.

SANA’s report did not say where the deal was signed, though it said the exploration will take place off the Syrian coast.

Most of the oil and gas fields in the country’s east are under opposition control, and the country’s oil exports have almost stopped.

Russia is one of Assad’s strongest international backers.

Israel is already developing recent discoveries of huge offshore deposits in the region, and Lebanon has spoken of trying to develop offshore fields.

Information for this article was contributed by Diaa Hadid of The Associated Press.

Front Section, Pages 9 on 12/26/2013

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