More Russian strikes as Syria rebels move south

A young girl covered in dust and holding a doll is carried out of an ambulance. The man helping her is wearing a dark coat and woollen hat.
Regime air strikes hit parts of Idlib in the north of Syria [Getty Images]

Russia carried out "a series of air strikes" in Syria on Sunday as rebels advanced after seizing Aleppo, according to the UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR).

Five people were killed in a strike on a hospital in Aleppo, while a strike inside the north-western city of Idlib killed eight civilians and wounded more than 50, SOHR said.

Warplanes also struck rural parts of Idlib and Hama where the group leading the rebel offensive "has recently taken control", it added.

The Syrian government has meanwhile lost control of Aleppo for the first time since the country's civil war began, the observers told news agency AFP.

The surprise offensive by opposition forces, which began on Wednesday, marks the most significant fighting in Syria's civil war in recent years.

It has been led by the Islamist militant group Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), as well as allied factions backed by Turkey.

More than 300 people, including at least 20 civilians, have been killed so far, according to SOHR.

Russian strikes hit Aleppo for the first time since 2016 on Saturday as rebel fighters swept into Aleppo, Syria's second-largest city, the observers said.

The Russian air force played a significant role in keeping President Bashar al-Assad in power during the peak of the civil war.

SOHR reported five Russian air strikes in a refugee camp in Idlib early on Sunday, a north-western city in which HTS is the dominant force.

SOHR later reported four strikes on Aleppo University Hospital, with civilians among the five dead.

Opposition fighters seized nearly all of the city from the government on Sunday, SOHR told AFP - except for the neighbourhoods controlled by Kurdish forces.

Syria's military withdrew from the city to prepare a counteroffensive.

Meanwhile, the rebels pushed south from Aleppo into several towns in the countryside near Syria's fourth largest city, Hama, according to SOHR.

Syria's defence ministry said the force had "reinforced [its] defensive lines" in the region with troops, rocket launchers and heavy military hardware.

"Joint Syrian-Russian warplanes" have intensified precise strikes on rebel positions, killing and wounding dozens, it said in a statement.

It added its troops had recaptured several towns that had been seized and prevented rebels from advancing, and claimed they were fleeing the region.

A number of people, some with firearms, outside the citadel
Rebel fighters were reportedly seen outside the citadel in Aleppo on Saturday [EPA]

The situation poses "severe risks to civilians and [has] serious implications for international peace and security", the United Nations (UN) special envoy for Syria warned.

Geir O Pederson said he had repeatedly warned of the dangers of "mere conflict management rather than conflict resolution" in Syria.

He called the present conflict a "mark of collective failure" to work towards a ceasefire in the country, an aim the UN Security Council endorsed in 2015, demanding "urgent and serious political engagement" to this end.

Speaking on Saturday, President Assad vowed to "defend [Syria's] stability and territorial integrity in the face of all terrorists and their backers".

"[The country] is capable, with the help of its allies and friends, of defeating and eliminating them, no matter how intense their terrorist attacks are," his office quoted him as saying.

Iran's top diplomat said the country, which has long been an ally of President Assad, "firmly support[s] the Syrian government and army".

Foreign minister Abbas Aragchi issued the statement ahead visiting Damascus on Sunday to discuss the offensive.

A map showing where Syria is. and with the northern city of Aleppo marked in the far north, above Idlib
[BBC]

The civil war, which has left around half a million people dead, began in 2011 after the Assad government responded to pro-democracy protests with a brutal crackdown.

The conflict has been largely dormant since a ceasefire agreed in 2020, but opposition forces have maintained control of the north-western city of Idlib and much of the surrounding province.

Idlib sits just 55km (34 miles) from Aleppo, which itself was a rebel stronghold until it fell to government forces in 2016.

HTS, which has led the latest offensive, was regarded as one of the most effective and deadly of the groups fighting the Assad government and was already the dominant force in Idlib.

The rebels took control of Aleppo's airport and dozens of nearby towns, according to SOHR.

They also announced an overnight curfew which came into force at 17:00 local time on Saturday (14:00 GMT).

SOHR also said the rebel fighters had advanced south toward Hama and that the Syrian army had withdrawn.

But a military source quoted in Syrian state media on Saturday night disputed this claim.

The Syrian army said rebels had launched "a broad attack from multiple axes on the Aleppo and Idlib fronts" and that battles had taken place "over a strip exceeding 100km (60 miles)".

Dozens of its soldiers have been killed, it said.

A US spokesperson said Syria's "reliance on Russia and Iran", along with its refusal to move forward with a 2015 UN Security Council peace plan, had "created the conditions now unfolding" in the country.

Pictures showed the roads leading out of Aleppo jammed with cars on Saturday as people tried to leave, and smoke rising out of the city's skyline.

Four men stand on top of an abandoned tank on the road to Aleppo. One man on the left has his hand raised in a v-for-victory style salute.
Rebels have reportedly taken control of Aleppo's airport and dozens of nearby towns [Getty Images]