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At least 70 killed in north of Syria’s Aleppo — monitor

By AFP - Jul 01,2016 - Last updated at Jul 01,2016

An injured Syrian boy receives treatment at a makeshift hospital following reported air strikes in the rebel-held town of Outaya, east of the capital Damascus, on Thursday (AFP photo)

BEIRUT — At least 70 regime and rebel fighters have been killed in 24 hours in a government assault and an extremist-led counterattack in northern Syria, a monitor said Thursday.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said 30 regime soldiers and 39 rebel fighters had been killed in battles around Al Maleh, north of Aleppo, since Wednesday afternoon.

Extremists fighting for Al Nusra Front, the Syrian branch of Al Qaeda, were also killed, said observatory head Rami Abdel Rahman, who did not provide a precise number.

The government of President Bashar  Assad has been attempting to seize Al Maleh for more than two years.

His forces have been trying for months to surround Aleppo by cutting supply lines between rebel-held districts of the city and nearby Turkey, which supports opposition forces.

For nearly a week, regime troops backed by Syrian and Russian warplanes have been battling for control of Al Maleh.

Assad’s regime is also attempting to cut the Castello Road, a key supply route from the Turkish border to rebel-held eastern suburbs of Aleppo.

The pro-regime website Al Masdar News reported that the Syrian army withdrew from the farms of Al Maleh as they faced a rebel counter-offensive led by Al Nusra Front.

It said rebels attacked government forces with two suicide car bombs.

The observatory said two children were killed by regime bombs in a rebel-held area of Aleppo.

The majority of Aleppo province is controlled by Al Nusra and its Islamist allies, while the city, the country’s pre-war commercial capital, has been divided since July 2012 into rebel-held and regime-held areas.

 

Five civilians including three children were also killed by regime bombs that landed on eastern Ghouta, the observatory reported on Thursday.

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