Syria air strikes on IS ‘capital’ kill 63 people

By
AFP
Syria air strikes on IS ‘capital’ kill 63 people
BEIRUT: A string of Syrian regime air strikes on the Islamic State group´s self-proclaimed capital Raqa on Tuesday killed at least 63 people, more than half of them civilians, a monitor said.

The air strikes were the deadliest by President Bashar al-Assad´s air force against Raqa since the extremist IS seized control of the city last year.

"Among the 63 killed were at least 36 civilians," said Rami Abdel Rahman of the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

"There were also 20 unidentified victims who could be civilians or jihadists, as well as the disfigured remains of at least seven other people," he said.

The director of the Britain-based monitoring group said previously that "most of the casualties were caused by two consecutive air strikes" on Raqa´s main industrial zone.

"The first strike came, residents rushed to rescue the wounded, and then the second raid took place," Abdel Rahman, whose group relies on a network of sources on the ground in Syria for its information, told AFP.

Amateur video footage distributed by activists in Raqa showed several bloodied bodies laid out on a street near an apparent bombing site, as an ambulance rushed to the scene.

Aid workers in red overalls bearing the Red Crescent symbol could be seen placing the corpses into white body bags.

Activists from the city meanwhile denounced the raids as a "massacre".

The Islamic State organisation emerged in Syria´s war in spring 2013.

It took over Raqa, the only provincial capital to fall from government control since the outbreak of a 2011 revolt, and turned it into its bastion. (AFP)