Missiles
hit school and hospital in Syrian border town, 14 dead: residents
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[February 15, 2016]
AMMAN (Reuters) - At least 14
civilians were killed when missiles hit a children's hospital, a school
and other locations in the rebel-held Syrian town of Azaz near the
Turkish border on Monday, a medic and two residents said.
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They said at least five missiles hit the hospital in the town
center and a nearby school, where refugees fleeing a major Syrian
army offensive were sheltering.
A resident said another refugee shelter south of the town was also
hit by bombs dropped by jets believed to be Russian.
Tens of thousands of people have fled to the town, the last rebel
stronghold before the border with Turkey, from towns and villages
where there is heavy fighting between the Syrian army and militias.
"We have been moving scores of screaming children from the
hospital," said medic Juma Rahal. At least two children were killed
and ambulances ferried scores of injured people to Turkey for
treatment, he said.
French charity Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières
(MSF) said in a statement that at least eight staff were missing
after four rockets hit a hospital that it supported in the province
of Idlib in north western Syria.
Kurdish anti-government forces are advancing from the west and have
been fighting anti-government insurgents on the of town, only a few
kilometers away from the main Bab al Salam border crossing. The
Syrian army is advancing from the south.
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Both the Kurds and the army want to wrest control of that stretch of
border with Turkey from the insurgents.
Russian bombing raids on rebel fighters are helping the Syrian army
to advance toward Aleppo, the country's largest city and commercial
center before the conflict. If the army takes the city, it will by
the Syrian government's biggest victory of the war.
(Reporting by Suleiman Al-Khalidi; Editing by Katharine Houreld)
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