At least 43 civilians have been killed
and dozens more wounded in three air
strikes on a busy market in al-Atarib, a
town in Syria's western Aleppo
provinc
from Syria's Idlib city, said theas expected to rise because
dozens of people had been wounded or
were still missing after the attack.
The UK-based Syrian Observatory for
Human Rights said it was not
immediately clear whether Monday's
strikes on al-Atarib, a town in a so-
called de-escalation zone, had been
carried out by Syrian warplanes or
those of Russia.
Videos posted on social media
purported to show massive destruction
at the scene with rubble from damaged
buildings covering the town's street
and peoples faces drenched in blood.
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The air strikes come less than two
weeks after peace talks in Astana where
Russia, Turkey and Iran announced
plans to implement no fly zones over
four so-called de-escalation zones.
The zones, which include the provinces
of Idlib, Homs, Latakia, Aleppo and
Hama - are areas where fighters and
government forces should halt
hostilities, including air raids, for six
months.
More than 2.5 million people are
believed to live in the zones.
The agreement, however, excludes the
Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant
(ISIL ) group and Hay'et Tahrir al-Sham.
Idlib is mainly controlled by Hay'et
Tahrir al-Sham, an alliance of anti-
government groups formed in January
and linked to al-Qaeda.
Syria's conflict evolved from a
government crackdown on protests in
2011 to a devastating war that has
drawn in world powers, including
Russia and a US-led international
coalition.
Since then, hundreds of thousands of
people have been killed and more than
10 million displaced, according.
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