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Updated 03 Nov, 2018 10:48am

Shelling kills eight in de-escalation zone around Syrian city

BEIRUT: Syrian government shelling of a rebel-held area in the country’s northwest killed on Friday at least eight people in the latest and deadliest violation of a truce in the area reached two months ago, a Syria war monitor and an opposition paramedic group said.

The artillery shelling marked another violation of a truce reached between Russia and Turkey in September that avoided a major government offensive on the rebel-held province of Idlib.

Last Friday, seven people were kil­led when government forces shelled parts of Idlib, according to opposition activists.

The Britain-based Syrian Observa­tory for Human Rights said eight people were killed, including five civilians, in the shelling near the village of Jarjanaz in Idlib.

The Syrian Civil Defence, also known as the White Helmets, said artillery shells left 10 people dead and others wounded.

The Sept 17 agreement to set up a demilitarised zone 15-20 kilometres (9-12 miles) deep and stretching along the front lines around Idlib, including parts of the provinces of Latakia, Hama and Aleppo, aimed to avert a government offensive on the area.

It also called on jihadi fighters to evacuate the demilitarised zone, but activists say many of them did not pull out.

Idlib has recently witnessed internal fighting between Al Qaeda-linked militants and Turkey-backed Syrian opposition fighters.

In the northern city of Raqqa, which was held by the militant Islamic State group until October last year, gunmen shot dead tribal leader Bashir Faysal Hweidi in his car, according to the Observatory and the activist collective Raqqa is Being Slaughtered Silently.

IS claimed responsibility for the attack accusing Hweidi in a statement of cooperating with the US-backed Kurdish-led group that captured the city from the extremists last year. Hweidi was a senior leader of the Afadla tribe, one of the largest in Raqqa province.

IS sleeper cells have been blamed for deadly attacks in areas they once controlled in Syria and Iraq.

In neighbouring Lebanon, the General Security Directorate that oversees foreigners in the country said in a statement that 87,670 Syrian refugees have returned home since July when the governments of Lebanon and Syria began facilitating the return of refugees.

Lebanon is home to more than a million Syrian refugees, or about a quarter of the country’s population, putting a huge strain on the economy.

Syria’s conflict that began in March 2011 has killed some 400,000 people and some five million refugees have fled to neighbouring countries. Millions others are internationally displaced.

Published in Dawn, November 3rd, 2018

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