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WAR REPORT
Syrians flee to Turkey after deadly Aazaz air strike
by Staff Writers
Syria-Turkey Border (AFP) Aug 16, 2012

Turkish jets 'bomb Kurdish rebel targets in Iraq'
Sulaimaniyah, Iraq (AFP) Aug 16, 2012 - Turkish warplanes bombed areas of north Iraq in a bid to target rear bases of the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) overnight into Thursday, a spokesman for the rebel group said.

"Turkish warplanes struck around midnight against several areas in the Kurdish Iraqi area," Haval Roz told AFP.

"Four warplanes took part, and did not cause any casualties but damaged farms and orchards," he said. "It started at 11:30 pm (2030 GMT) and continued until 12:10 am."

Roz said the bombings were near the villages of Laji, Khenera and Boskan, all in the autonomous Kurdistan region of northern Iraq were the PKK maintains rear bases.

The PKK took up arms in Kurdish-majority southeastern Turkey in 1984, sparking a conflict that has claimed about 45,000 lives.


Carrying bags of clothes and boxes of food on their heads, hundreds of Syrians are fleeing to Turkey after a massive Syrian air strike on the northern rebel bastion of Aazaz.

Wednesday's bombing flattened a string of houses and killed at least 46 people, with a Syrian watchdog reporting 31 killed and 200 more wounded and Turkey saying another 15 had died in its hospitals after crossing the border.

"That's it, I've had it. Nobody should have to live with this kind of fear in his heart. How could my children go to sleep if we didn't leave," said Abu Alaa, an Aazaz resident in his mid-40s.

Entire families could be seen filing past the immigration office at the crossing point into the Turkish town of Kilis.

"I've never seen anything like it," he said, shouting orders at his children and other relatives packed in the back of a pick-up truck.

Others walked from Aazaz with their belongings and were equally adamant they could no longer remain in their hometown, which lies just a few kilometres (miles) from the border with Turkey.

"It was a massacre, an entire family like mine was exterminated," said one woman who refused to give her name.

Turkey has been one of the main powers denouncing Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's regime and is being used as a rear base by several rebel groups.

Turkish authorities opened the border crossing to Syrians earlier this month.

The exodus was triggered after a Syrian fighter jet dropped a bomb on a heavily-populated area of Aazaz as many were sleeping during the Ramadan fast, levelling at least 10 houses, according to an AFP reporter at the scene.

Aazaz, just north of the main battleground city of Aleppo, was a rebel bastion used by Free Syrian Army fighters, but locals say many innocent people were killed in the air strike.

"This was a civilian area. All these houses were packed with women and children sleeping during the fast," said witness Abu Omar, a civil engineer in his 50s.

Human Rights Watch also said many of the victims were women and children.

"This horrific attack killed and wounded scores of civilians and destroyed a whole residential block," said Anna Neistat, HRW's acting emergencies director.

"Yet again, Syrian government forces attacked with callous disregard for civilian life," she said in a statement.

The regime launched the air strike shortly before a UN panel denounced Syrian forces and their militia allies for committing crimes against humanity, including murder and torture, during the conflict now in its 18th month.

The panel also accused the armed rebels who are battling the Assad regime of war crimes but to a lesser extent.

At the Syria-Turkey border, Samia, wearing a black head-to-toe veil, said she had come from Aleppo with her five children.

"My husband and eldest son stayed behind. One is looking after the shop and the other is fighting. But the rest of us had to leave. We know Assad will kill women and children," she said.

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15 Syrians die in Turkish hospitals after air strike
Ankara (AFP) Aug 16, 2012 - About 15 Syrians have died in Turkish hospitals of their wounds from an air strike after 100 were sent across the border for treatment following the attack, a Turkish official said Thursday.

Many of those injured suffered severe burns in Wednesday's air strike by a Syrian air force MiG fighter jet in the town of Aazaz near Aleppo, which killed more than 30 people instantly and left more than 200 injured.

Many of the wounded were taken across the border to hospitals in Turkey's southeastern city of Kilis, around 20 kilometres (12 miles) away, the Turkish official told AFP.

Some 15 of them succumbed to their wounds in hospital, the source said.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said Wednesday that 31 people were killed in the aerial attack, the latest atrocity blamed on the regime of President Bashar al-Assad, and that the toll was expected to rise.

The number of Syrians crossing into Turkey has dramatically increased since the Syrian army ramped up its offensive against rebels in cities close to the Turkish border, particularly around Aleppo.

Turkey is sheltering around 62,000 refugees in camps in the south of the country and also providing sanctuary to Syrian military defectors in a separate camp near the border, where security is tighter.



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WAR REPORT
Air strike kills over 30 as OIC suspends Syria
Aazaz, Syria (AFP) Aug 16, 2012
The Organisation of Islamic Cooperation suspended Syria, saying the Muslim world "can no longer accept a regime that massacres its people", as 31 people were reported killed in an air strike. Regime forces were also bombarding the key battleground city of Aleppo in the north, activists said, while Damascus was shaken by a bomb attack targeting a military headquarters and a firefight near the ... read more


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