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Russia claims it has not bombed Aleppo for '28 days', less than 24 hours after Syria air strikes resume

Last month’s moratorium on strikes on rebel-held Aleppo still in place, Kremlin says, in face of evidence area has been hit in renewed campaign 

Wednesday 16 November 2016 12:23 EST
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The aftermath of bombing in east Aleppo's al Shaar neighbourhood on Wednesday 16 November (Aleppo Media Centre)
The aftermath of bombing in east Aleppo's al Shaar neighbourhood on Wednesday 16 November (Aleppo Media Centre)

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A moratorium on Russian air strikes on opposition neighbourhoods of east Aleppo is still in place, Moscow has claimed, despite evidence that rebel areas have been targeted by warplanes within the first 24 hours of a new Russian bombing campaign in Syria.

East Aleppo has not been bombed for 28 days, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said on Wednesday.

The day before, the Russian Defence Ministry announcing coordinated missile strikes against rebels in Homs and Idlib provinces, utilising the country’s only aircraft carrier in combat for the first time.

Strikes were not targeting Aleppo, Mr Peskov told reporters. However, activists in the city and a monitor say strikes on Wednesday hit close to a hospital and school, killing 20 people.

At least five children and an emergency worker died in the bombings, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said, in attacks that were either carried out by Russian or Syrian jets.

“The helicopters won't stop for a single moment,” Bebars Mishal, a civil defence service volunteer said. “Right now, the bombing won't let up,” he added, estimating more than 40 strikes had hit the city since daybreak.

The Observatory and residents said three neighbourhoods were hit by rocket strikes by jets, barrel bombs dropped from helicopters and artillery fired by government forces on Wednesday.

Syrian state television said President Bashar al-Assad's air force took part in strikes against what it called terrorist strongholds in Aleppo's Old City, and Russia said Isis and al-Qaeda affiliated rebels had been targeted and hit, but did not mention Aleppo.

The previous pause in strikes on the city declared on October 18 was supposed to allow rebels and civilians leave regime siege barricades under the terms of an amnesty, although both sides blamed the other for sniper and mortar fire on checkpoints into west Aleppo which prevented almost all those who wanted to from leaving.

The UN, which said the pause in fighting did not meet its security guarantees, was unable to deliver any aid, leaving the area’s 250,000 residents - living under siege conditions since July - facing starvation as winter approaches.

Also on Wednesday, Syrian state television said that the government was preparing to deploy troops for a renewed ground offensive on several fronts in Aleppo. “Zero hour,” was imminent, reports said.

The balance of the five-and-a-half year old civil war tipped in President Assad’s favour after his Russian allies began providing military assistance in 2015.

The divided city of Aleppo - scene of some of the country’s fiercest fighting - is now the last major urban rebel stronghold in the country.

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