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A civil defence member carries an injured girl rescued from under debris at a site reportedly hit by an air strike by Syrian regime forces in the town of Marshamsha, in the southern countryside of Idlib, yesterday.
The UN Office for the Co-ordination of Humanitarian affairs says around 35,000 people are reported to have been displaced from the southwestern outskirts of Aleppo city
AFP
Beirut
Tens of thousands have fled new regime offensives in Syria, the UN said yesterday, as Russian air strikes were reported to have so far killed 370 people, many of them civilians.
The mass exodus was focused south of Syria’s second city Aleppo, one of five areas where regime troops have launched renewed attacks since Russia began its air war on September 30.
“Around 35,000 people are reported to have been displaced from... the southwestern outskirts of Aleppo city, following government offensives over the last few days,” said Vanessa Huguenin, spokeswoman for the UN Office for the Co-ordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA).
She said many of the displaced were living with host families and in informal settlements in the west of the province.
“People urgently need food and basic household and shelter items” especially as the weather gets colder, Huguenin said.
Syria’s conflict has left more than 250,000 dead and forced millions from their homes since March 2011, sparking a mass migration of refugees that has left Europe struggling to cope.
Russia has carried out more than 500 air raids in support of President Bashar al-Assad’s forces and a monitoring group yesterday gave the first estimate for the total number of dead in the strikes.
The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said at least 370 people had been killed, including more than 120 civilians.
Among them were 45 rebels and civilians killed on Monday in a series of Russian strikes in the north of government stronghold Latakia province, it said.
Dozens were also wounded in Monday’s raids, some of the deadliest yet in the Russian campaign, and a rebel commander from a moderate opposition group was among the dead, the Observatory said.
Russian President Vladimir Putin said yesterday that Moscow’s air war demonstrated it could counter any “terrorist” threats.
“The operation has confirmed that Russia is ready to adequately and effectively respond to terrorist and any other threats to our country,” Putin said in a speech to military and intelligence commanders at the Kremlin.
The Observatory said Russian air strikes yesterday had targeted the provinces of Homs, Idlib, Damascus and Aleppo.
As many as 100,000 people were fleeing the army’s ground assaults in Hama, Aleppo, and Latakia provinces, it said.
Syrian activist Maamun al-Khatieb said thousands had fled fierce Russian bombardment and “the fear that Iranian militias would storm their villages”.
Iran, a key Assad ally, has reportedly sent hundreds of troops to fight alongside his forces.
Aleppo, once Syria’s economic hub, has been a key focus of the fighting. Since 2012, the war-ravaged city has been divided between government forces in the west and rebels in the east, with the situation largely reversed in the surrounding countryside.
But last Friday, government forces began a new offensive south of the city, attacking areas near the strategic Aleppo-Damascus highway.
The Observatory said yesterday that regime forces had seized five villages in the area since the offensive began.
But Syria’s Al Watan daily, which is close to the regime, said the army had taken 16 villages and an area totalling some 100sq km.
It said the operation would “cut militant reinforcement routes between south Aleppo province and east Idlib province and take the international highway from Aleppo to Hama”.
The highway that runs from Aleppo to Damascus via Hama and Homs provinces appears to be the main target of several of the government offensives launched in recent weeks.
In Hama, much of the fighting has centred on an area close to the road, and in Homs, the government has been fighting to take villages along the highway just north of the provincial capital.
In Homs, thousands of people have fled from a string of villages since the Syrian army’s offensive there began on October 15, said Hassaan Abu Nuh, an activist in the town of Talbisseh.
“They’ve spread throughout the outskirts of Homs... those who left took whatever they could carry,” he told AFP via the Internet.
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