Deadly strike hits Syria rebel town despite truce

An air strike killed eight civilians late on July 24 in a rebel-held region near Damascus where a truce was declared at the weekend, medics and a monitoring group said.

The strike hit the town of Arbin in the Eastern Ghouta rebel enclave at around 11:30 p.m. local time, residents said.

At least four children and one woman were among the dead, according to medics and the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

Observatory chief Rami Abdel Rahman said either government warplanes or those of its Russian ally carried out the strike, which also wounded at least 30 people.

The truce announced for Eastern Ghouta on July 24 was the second thrashed out under an agreement struck by government allies Iran and Russia and rebel backer Turkey in May.

The army said it would observe an indefinite freeze in fighting with rebels in the region.  

But the pro-government Al-Watan newspaper reported on July 24 that the truce excluded areas held by former al-Qaeda affiliate Fateh al-Sham Front or its ally Faylaq al-Rahman - which controls Arbin.

An AFP correspondent who visited the town's hospital early on Tuesday saw at least five small bodies laid out on the floor wrapped in white shrouds.

Two of them were toddlers.

"My sister came to visit me and she and her two children were killed," a woman cried.

A pair of exhausted doctors walked through the hospital after a long night treating patients.

The Observatory said there had been air strikes on Eastern Ghouta on July 24 and again early on July 25, but that the deaths in Arbin were the first civilian deaths since the truce.

A similar ceasefire was announced for southern areas of Syria on July 9.

Under the May agreement, "de...

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