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Aleppo: Pro-government forces slaughter at least 82 civilians while closing in on Syrian city, UN says | Aleppo: Pro-government forces slaughter at least 82 civilians while closing in on Syrian city, UN says |
(about 3 hours later) | |
As Aleppo enters the final hours of battle, concerns for civilians' safety are more pressing than ever, the UN has said, as militia forces loyal to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad are reported to have entered homes and killed at least 82 civilians during their advance on rebel-held territory. | |
Head of the UN's human rights office Rupert Colville said that six different sources had confirmed 82 non-combatants were shot in four different neighbourhoods overnight on Tuesday. The reports included 11 women and 13 children killed. | |
"Yesterday evening, we received further deeply disturbing reports that numerous bodies were lying on the streets," he told reporters in Geneva. "The residents were unable to retrieve them due to the intense bombardment and their fear of being shot on sight." | "Yesterday evening, we received further deeply disturbing reports that numerous bodies were lying on the streets," he told reporters in Geneva. "The residents were unable to retrieve them due to the intense bombardment and their fear of being shot on sight." |
There has been a "complete meltdown of humanity in Aleppo," UN spokesperson Jens Laerke added. Approximately 100 children were trapped in a building under fire and separated from remaining family members on Tuesday, a doctor told Unicef. | |
An activist still in the city also said that snipers had shot at those on the streets on Monday night. | |
Lynn Maalouf, deputy director for research at Amnesty International's Beirut office, said the reports that civilians, including children, "are being massacred in cold blood in their homes by Syrian government forces are deeply shocking but not unexpected," given other such incidents in the war. She went on to call the allegations "war crimes". | |
The Syrian military has denied the claims, calling them a "desperate attempt" to garner international sympathy. The army will declare control of the whole of Aleppo "at any moment", Syrian state television said on Tuesday. | |
On the government controlled side of the city, residents celebrated the fall of the rebels - who have killed hundreds of civilians in west Aleppo in rocket attacks - with dancing and fireworks. | |
Exact figures are difficult to verify, but between 50,000 - 100,000 civilians are still thought to be trapped by fighting in the rebel enclave, which is now as small as 2.5 square miles (four square kilometres). | |
Videos reportedly taken inside the city show scenes of horrific destruction and human misery caused by intense bombing, as almost all medical and aid services have broken down. Scores of bodies remained trapped under rubble, the local White Helmets civil defence service said, and the UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights confirmed. | |
For those left alive, what comes after the city falls may be even worse. Civilians and activists are afraid of detention or more executions by Shia militias allied to the Syrian government and army troops if they are suspected of being members of the opposition. | |
Several activists posted goodbye messages on Monday before going silent. "Anyone who knows anything about the Assad regime should know what to expect. Death will be a wish for those captured and deemed [to be] opposition, weather [sic] military or civil," one wrote in a Whatsapp message to journalists. | |
Jan Egeland, the UN’s humanitarian adviser on Syria, tweeted that the Russian and Syrian governments would be responsible for any such abuses. | Jan Egeland, the UN’s humanitarian adviser on Syria, tweeted that the Russian and Syrian governments would be responsible for any such abuses. |
“The Gov'ts of Syria & Russia are accountable for any and all atrocities that the victorious militias in Aleppo are now committing!,” he wrote. | “The Gov'ts of Syria & Russia are accountable for any and all atrocities that the victorious militias in Aleppo are now committing!,” he wrote. |
Reports have already emerged of men from neighbourhoods recaptured by the regime disappearing. Their wherabouts are still unknown, the UN says. | Reports have already emerged of men from neighbourhoods recaptured by the regime disappearing. Their wherabouts are still unknown, the UN says. |
UN, US, Russian and Turkish talks to implement a ceasefire are ongoing but all efforts have so far failed. Rebels have also indicated they want a humanitarian ceasefire to evacuate those in need of medical assistance. | UN, US, Russian and Turkish talks to implement a ceasefire are ongoing but all efforts have so far failed. Rebels have also indicated they want a humanitarian ceasefire to evacuate those in need of medical assistance. |
Russian's Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov told journalists from Serbia on Tuesday that "[Russia] is tired of hearing this whining from our American colleagues in the current administration that we need to immediately halt military action." | |
The International Red Cross and several other NGOs issued renewed pleas on Tuesday for all sides in the conflict to "respect human life" and lay down their weapons. The Syrian government, so close to victory, is unlikely to heed the international community's calls. | The International Red Cross and several other NGOs issued renewed pleas on Tuesday for all sides in the conflict to "respect human life" and lay down their weapons. The Syrian government, so close to victory, is unlikely to heed the international community's calls. |
Aleppo has been divided into a government-controlled west and rebel-controlled east more than four years. | Aleppo has been divided into a government-controlled west and rebel-controlled east more than four years. |
East Aleppo’s supply chains were cut off in August, leaving its 250,000 residents and around 8,000 fighters - among them al-Qaeda affiliated forces - under siege conditions. | |
With rebel opposition relegated to tiny pockets, Mr Assad is set to recapture the entire city in what will be his biggest victory yet in the almost-six-year-old civil war. | With rebel opposition relegated to tiny pockets, Mr Assad is set to recapture the entire city in what will be his biggest victory yet in the almost-six-year-old civil war. |