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Refugees from Aleppo attend a meeting in Losino-Petrovsky, about 52km northeast of Moscow, Russia. Pavel Golovkin AP/Press Association Images

'Children are being killed': Hundreds flee to government-held districts in Aleppo

An estimated 275,000 people are trapped in terrible conditions in the city’s rebel-held eastern districts.

HUNDREDS OF PEOPLE in Syria’s Aleppo have fled to areas under government control, a monitoring group said today, as pro-government forces press on with an assault that has laid waste to the city’s opposition neighbourhoods.

The British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said around 400 evacuees sought refuge in the Masaken Hanano neighborhood, captured by pro-government forces yesterday.

It said an additional 30 families fled to Sheikh Maqsoud, which is under Kurdish control.

Syrian state media reported that hundreds of families had vacated areas under rebel control.

Syrian state TV broadcast a video showing a teary reunion between a soldier and his family after nearly five years apart, according to the report. It said the family had been trapped in Masaken Hanano.

The Lebanese Al-Manar TV channel reported from the neighbourhood this morning, showing workers and soldiers clearing debris against a backdrop of bombed-out buildings on both sides of a wide avenue. Al-Manar is operated by Hezbollah, the Lebanese militant group aligned with the Syrian government.

Aleppo used to be Syria’s largest city and commerce capital before its neighborhoods were devastated by the country’s more than five-year-long civil war.

An estimated 275,000 people are trapped in terrible conditions in the city’s rebel-held eastern districts since the government sealed its siege of the enclave in late August.

Children killed and injured 

Food supplies are running perilously low, the UN warned on Thursday, and a relentless air assault by government forces has damaged or destroyed every hospital in the area.

The UN’s child agency warned today that nearly 500,000 children were now living under siege in Syria, cut off from food and medical aid, mostly in areas under government control. That figure has doubled in less than a year.

Many are now spending their days underground, as hospitals, schools and homes remain vulnerable to aerial bombardment.

“Children are being killed and injured, too afraid to go to school or even play, surviving with little food and hardly any medicine,” Unicef’s executive director Anthony Lake, said, adding:

This is no way to live, and too many are dying.

Activists also reported tens of civilian casualties from a presumed government or Russian airstrike on a village outside Aleppo today.

The Local Coordination Committees activist network in Syria reported 15 civilians killed in a Russian airstrike on the village of Anjara, controlled by the opposition in the western Aleppo countryside, and tens of others wounded. Activists usually identify planes by their silhouettes and home base.

The British-based Observatory said the strike was accompanied by raids on other opposition-held villages in the Aleppo countryside.

Meanwhile, Turkey’s state-run Anadolu news agency reported today that the Islamic State group used chemical weapons against Turkish-backed Syrian opposition fighters in northern Syria, wounding 22. The report cited a statement by the chief of general staff’s office. The report could not be immediately verified independently.

Read: Six people die from “thunderstorm asthma” in Australia

Read: France hits the polls to elect who will take on Marine Le Pen, and there’s a clear frontrunner

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34 Comments
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    Mute Uncle Mort
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    May 26th 2013, 4:42 PM

    Will the home-grown ones be charged with treason?

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    Mute guardian
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    May 26th 2013, 4:47 PM

    Actually your dead right it is treason. No different if irish man for political beliefs kills garda or irish solider.

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    Mute John Michael
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    May 26th 2013, 6:43 PM

    Here we go again. It used to be a crime in England to be Irish. Now it’s a crime to be a Muslim. Where’s the evidence against these people? Knowing a criminal doesn’t make you one.

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    Mute ciaran clarke
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    May 26th 2013, 7:30 PM

    It does if you don’t report what their up too

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    Mute John Michael
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    May 26th 2013, 8:20 PM

    How quickly people forget.

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    Mute John Michael
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    May 26th 2013, 11:27 PM

    The judge in the Guilford Four case wondered why they had not been tried for treason so he could have “without doubt passed a sentence of death by hanging”. Attitudes seem to change when it’s happening to people you don’t like.

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    Mute Sarcaholik
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    May 26th 2013, 8:21 PM

    Should be interesting to see how long Cameron and Hague etc wait to arm their peers in Syria, now that Hezbollah have officially entered they fray?!?

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    Mute Uncle Mort
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    May 26th 2013, 8:36 PM

    Hizbullah, the contracts division of the Iranian Government

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    Mute Sarcaholik
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    May 26th 2013, 10:02 PM

    True but the best of a bad lot…..just ask the IDF and their affiliates!

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    Mute Stephen McMahon
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    May 27th 2013, 12:00 AM

    At least unlike Mossad they don’t carry out their dirty work using Irish passports. How soon we forget.

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