BEIRUT: Overnight air strikes and a rocket attack on an
opposition-held area west of Aleppo killed five rescue workers, who
appeared to have been deliberately targeted, a monitoring group and
colleagues nearby said.
The raids, which the rescue workers said consisted of two air strikes
and at least one rocket, hit a centre for the Syrian Civil Defence,
known as the "White Helmets", in the town of Atareb, some 25 km (15
miles) west of Aleppo.Fighting has intensified in Aleppo province in recent weeks as a partial truce brokered the United States and Russia has all but broken down.
The Civil Defence corps work as first responders in opposition-held territory where medical infrastructure has broken down.
"The targeting was very precise," Radi Saad, a Civil Defence worker based in northwestern Syria, told Reuters via internet.
"They were in the centre and ready to respond. When they heard warplanes in the area they did not think they would be the target."
It was unclear whether Syrian or Russian warplanes had launched the raids, he said. There was no immediate comment from the Syrian government.
Another Civil Defence member, Ahmad Sheikho, said five rescue workers had died and two were seriously wounded. Ambulances and cars belonging to doctors were also destroyed.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a British-based monitoring group, said at least five had been killed, confirming that the centre appeared to have been deliberately targeted.
In Aleppo city, government air strikes and insurgent
bombardments have killed dozens of people in the last few days, the
Observatory says.
(Reporting by John Davison; Editing by Andrew Heavens and John Stonestreet)
- Reuters
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