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Syria: At least 22 killed in Idlib and Aleppo airstrikes

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BEIRUT: Government airstrikes on opposition-held territory in northwest Syria killed at least 22 people, a monitoring group said Friday, as the UN’s children’s agency warned a new battle in the war-torn country could affect the lives of 1 million children
Government forces unleashed a wave of airstrikes across Idlib, Aleppo and Hama provinces after days of building up ground forces at the edge of opposition territory, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.
The group said 14 people were killed in the Aleppo province and another eight in the province of Idlib.
Fears have been building for days of a government offensive against the last major bastion for the opposition, centered in the Idlib province and along the edges of the Aleppo and Hama provinces.
UN agencies are warning a campaign to capture Idlib would aggravate an already dire humanitarian situation.
Food, water and medicine are already in short supply in the largely rural Idlib province, which is now home to over 1 million Syrians displaced from their homes by government offensives in other parts of the country, said UNICEF, the U.N. children’s agency.
Some 350,000 children, many already living in refugee camps, are at risk of displacement in the event of war, said the agency.
A local search-and-rescue group said in an initial report on the airstrikes that at least one child had been killed.
The Civil Defense, also known as the White Helmets, said government aircraft bombed homes in the towns of Khan Sheikhoun, Altmana, Sukayk and Alteh.
Hussein Kayal, a media activist in Khan Sheikhoun, said the attack was sudden and shattered nearly three months of calm in the town, as the government focused on defeating opposition forces in south Syria.
“It’s been three hours of non-stop bombing,” he said.
Syria’s government dropped leaflets across the province Thursday, urging residents to reconcile with its rule. Officials have warned that government forces will take back the province by force if necessary.
The Observatory said the government was moving ground forces to the north in preparation for an all-out assault, including tanks and artillery.
The UN has warned the consequences of such a campaign could be catastrophic.
“War cannot be allowed to go to Idlib,” said Jan Egeland, a top U.N. humanitarian adviser on Syria.
There are 2.9 million people living in Idlib and surrounding opposition-held areas, according to U.N. estimates.
The UN has appealed to Turkey to open its border to refugees, should the Syrian government decide to attack the province, Egeland said.
Turkey, which has established itself as a sponsor of rebels in northern Syria, already hosts some 3.5 million Syrian refugees – the most of any nation. It has also established 12 monitoring posts in Idlib and deployed 1,000 troops in the province.
But Kayal in Khan Sheikhoun said there were doubts the Turkish presence would deter the Syrian government from attacking.
“People here won’t be surprised if there’s a ground attack. The Turkish points are weak – they won’t repel anything. We’re scared that if anything happens, (the Turkish forces) will pull out immediately,” he said.

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