BEIRUT (Reuters) – Nearly 30 air strikes hit rebel-held areas of Aleppo yesterday as a temporary “calm” declared by Syria’s military took effect around Damascus and in the northwest.
It was the ninth day of deadly bombardments in Aleppo, which has borne the brunt of increased fighting that has all but destroyed a February ceasefire and killed nearly 250 people in the northern city since April 22, a monitoring group said.
It also contributed to the breakup of peace talks in Geneva, which the main opposition walked out of last week.
The Syrian army announced a “regime of calm”, or lull in fighting, late on Friday, which Damascus said was designed to salvage the wider ceasefire.
While that appeared to mostly hold in and around the capital and parts of northwest coastal province Latakia, the bombing continued in Aleppo which was excluded from the plan.
Anas Al Abde, president of the Turkey-based opposition Syrian National Coalition, accused the government of violating the February truce “daily”. The opposition was ready to reinstate the wider truce, but reserved the right to respond with force to attacks, he said.
All sides have accused each other of truce violations.
The Syrian army did not explain in any detail what military or non-military action the “regime of calm” would entail. It said it would last for 24 hours in the capital Damascus and its suburb Eastern Ghouta and for 72 hours in rural areas around the northern city of Latakia.
At least five people were killed in Aleppo early yesterday in air strikes believed to have been carried out by Syrian government warplanes, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.
Aleppo, Syria’s largest city before the war, has been divided for years between rebel and government-held zones.
Full control would be a huge prize for President Bashar al-Assad.
Of the 250 casualties since April 22, 140 were killed in bombardments by government-aligned forces and 96 by rebel shelling. Forty children were among the dead, according to the Observatory’s tally.
Observatory director Rami Abdulrahman said government-held areas of Aleppo were “a bit quieter today”, but that rebels were still firing shells intermittently.
State news agency SANA said at least one person had been killed by rebel shelling on government-held neighbourhoods.
Latakia and Ghouta were quiet with only some lower-level violence between rival rebel groups outside Damascus, Abdulrahman said.
A resident of Western Ghouta, which is under government siege, said shellings appeared to have ceased around the capital in the hours after the start of the lull at 1 am (2200 GMT on Friday).
“There has been no military activity and no sound of bombardments in nearby areas, no sound of shelling or of warplanes,” Maher Abu Jaafar told Reuters via the Internet.
“It’s the opposite of last night, when there was a lot of bombing and the sounds of rockets and shells.”
Syrian helicopters later in the day dropped barrel bombs southwest of Damascus outside the area where the lull in fighting was meant to take place, the Observatory said.