Barrel bombs kill 11 civilians in ISIL town in Syria
At least 11 civilians, among them three children, were killed on July 16 in regime barrel bomb attacks on a jihadist-held town in northern Syria, a monitoring group said.
Government helicopters dropped the crude and indiscriminate weapons on Al-Bab, which lies in the northern province of Aleppo and is held by the extremist Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.
Since July 11, at least 68 civilians have been killed in aerial attacks on the town.
Observatory head Rami Abdel Rahman told AFP the "intensified air attacks by regime forces on Al-Bab are aimed at foiling ISIL efforts on multiple fronts," including the nearby Kweyris military airport, which ISIL has besieged for more than a year.
Al-Bab is strategically important because it is one of ISIL's closest positions to regime-held parts of Aleppo, he said.
In May, more than 60 civilians were killed by barrel bomb attacks on the town.
Syria's embattled regime has heavily bombarded areas in Aleppo province that have fallen out of its control.
To the west, in Idlib province, an alliance of rebels and Islamist fighters carried heavily shelled the province's last two regime-held Shiite villages for the second consecutive day.
The "Army of Conquest," an opposition coalition that includes Al-Qaeda's Syria affiliate Al-Nusra Front, began its assault on Fuaa and Kafraya on July 15.
"Dozens of shells fell overnight Wednesday [July 15] and into Thursday [July 16] morning on Fuaa and Kafraya, which are largely inhabited by Shiite Muslims," the Observatory said.
Abdel Rahman said there were casualties but had no immediate toll.
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