World

Russian and Syrian forces preparing for ceasefire after airstrikes kill 36

Rescue workers trying to remove a boy stuck in the debris of a building in the neighborhood of Qaterji in rebel-held east Aleppo following an airstrike in the Syrian city. Picture by Syrian Civil Defense White Helmets/Associated Press
Rescue workers trying to remove a boy stuck in the debris of a building in the neighborhood of Qaterji in rebel-held east Aleppo following an airstrike in the Syrian city. Picture by Syrian Civil Defense White Helmets/Associated Press Rescue workers trying to remove a boy stuck in the debris of a building in the neighborhood of Qaterji in rebel-held east Aleppo following an airstrike in the Syrian city. Picture by Syrian Civil Defense White Helmets/Associated Press

RUSSIAN and Syrian forces are preparing a "humanitarian pause" for the besieged city of Aleppo on Thursday, the head of Russia's military general staff said.

Lt Gen Sergei Rudskoi was quoted by Russian news agencies as saying that Russian and Syrian forces will halt their fighting from 8am to 4pm on October 20 in order to allow civilians and rebels safe passage out of the city as well as for the evacuation of the sick and wounded.

He said there will be two corridors by which people can leave the city.

Meanwhile, air strikes on rebel-held areas in Aleppo have killed at least 36 people, including children, opposition activists said.

The violence in Syria continued while a major operation began against Islamic State (IS) in neighbouring Iraq.

Most of the deaths were in the village of Oweijel, just west of the city of Aleppo, where at least 23 people were killed in an air strike that also wounded dozens, according to the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

Another monitoring group, the Local Co-ordination Committees, said the air raid was carried out by Russian warplanes and put the death toll at 30.

More than a dozen people were also killed in a besieged eastern rebel-held neighbourhood in Aleppo.

The eastern parts of the city, Syria's largest, have been subjected in recent weeks to the worst aerial attacks in years.

The air strikes have claimed hundreds of lives, wounded many others and demolished entire buildings.

Opposition activists have blamed Russian and Syrian government warplanes for the strikes.

The observatory said yesterday's air strikes hit in the Marjeh neighbourhood.

The Aleppo Media Centre, an activist collective, said those killed included 11 people with the same family name of Qabs ranging from a month-and-a-half-old baby girl to a 25-year-old man.

Monday's air strikes coincided with the launch in neighbouring Iraq of a major operation by Iraqi and Kurdish forces, backed by the US-led coalition, to retake the city of Mosul from IS.

There have been concerns the government in Damascus could use the timing of the Mosul offensive to press its onslaught in Aleppo while world attention is diverted to developments in Iraq.

Syrian state media claimed 49 rebels were killed and wounded in fighting in the neighbourhoods of Sheikh Saeed and Shurfa on the southern edges of Aleppo.

In the nearby province of Idlib, a US-led coalition drone struck a car in the provincial capital that carries the same name, killing all inside, according to the observatory.

It was not immediately clear who was in the vehicle, but such attacks have previously targeted officials with al-Qaida's affiliate in Syria, known as Fatah al-Sham Front.

The observatory said the attack targeted a faction commander.

An official with Fatah al-Sham Front, formerly known as Nusra Front, said all those in the car were "martyred". The man said it was not clear if members of his group were targeted.

Earlier this month, a drone attack killed top al-Qaida official Ahmed Salama Mabrouk.

The US and UK on Sunday acknowledged the western world's weak support for any military action against Syria's government as they seek ways to pressure Syrian president Bashar Assad and his chief backer, Russia, to halt the deadly Aleppo offensive.

After a meeting of 11 governments opposing Assad's rule, US secretary of state John Kerry and foreign secretary Boris Johnson each insisted that all options were on the table.

But their stark explanations about the danger of resorting to military force appeared to rule out such a move.

The government in Damascus, meanwhile, appears to be trying to improve relations with Egypt, the Arab world's most populous nation, following the first public meeting between Egyptian and Syrian security chiefs.

Major General Ali Mamlouk, head of the National Security Bureau and one of Assad's top aides, visited Cairo on Sunday at the head of a delegation to coordinate with Egypt in the fight against "terrorism" in the region, Syria's state-run news agency SANA said.

SANA said the Syrians met with top intelligence officials, including deputy chief of Egypt's intelligence agency. It said both sides agreed on "coordinating political standpoints" and strengthening the "cooperation in fighting terrorism". Egypt's pro-government Sada al-Balad and other news websites reported on Sunday that six Syrians arrived on a private jet from Damascus.

Earlier this month Egypt voted for rival French and Russian draft resolutions on Syria at the UN Security Council, arguing that both called for a truce and for aid for besieged Syrians in the rebel-held areas of the northern city of Aleppo.

The move angered Egypt's major financier Saudi Arabia, which supports rebels fighting against Assad's Moscow-backed government.

Egypt and Syria are both fighting extremists, including members of IS. Both countries also have poor relations with Turkey's president Recep Tayyip Erdogan.