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August 2, 2016

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Russian chopper shot in Syria, 5 killed

FIVE people on board a Russian military helicopter were killed yesterday when it was shot down over Syria, in the single deadliest incident for Moscow since it intervened in the war.

The attack came as Syrian opposition fighters and their jihadist allies battled government forces outside Aleppo in a bid to ease the siege of rebel-held parts of the city.

Russia’s defense ministry announced the downing of the helicopter, which it said was carrying three crew and two officers.

“A Russian Mi-8 military transport helicopter was shot down from the ground after delivering humanitarian aid to Aleppo,” the defense ministry said in a statement quoted by Russian news agencies. The Kremlin said all five people on board were assumed dead.

“As far as we know from the information we’ve had from the defense ministry, those in the helicopter died, they died heroically, because they were trying to move the aircraft away to minimize victims on the ground,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told journalists.

It was not immediately clear who was responsible.

The incident was the deadliest single attack on Russian forces in Syria since Moscow began its intervention in support of President Bashar al-Assad’s government last September.

It brought the total number of members of the Russian forces killed in Syria to 18.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a Britain-based monitor, said the helicopter had come down along the administrative border between Idlib province in the northwest and neighboring Aleppo.

Idlib is held almost entirely by a powerful coalition of Islamist and jihadist forces including the former Al-Nusra Front, now known as the Fateh al-Sham Front after renouncing its status as al Qaida’s Syrian affiliate.

In neighboring Aleppo province, the Fateh al-Sham Front and allied Islamist rebel groups were fighting fierce battles against government troops on the outskirts of Aleppo city.

The clashes are part of an assault launched on Sunday to try to ease a government siege of the rebel-held east of the city.

The heavy clashes left dozens dead on both sides, the observatory said, without giving a specific toll.

It said the rebels had advanced overnight south and southwest of Aleppo but reported ongoing fighting, as well as government air strikes on the battlefield and rebel-held eastern neighborhoods.

Once Syria’s economic powerhouse, Aleppo city has been roughly divided between government control in the west and rebel control in the east since mid-2012.

In recent weeks, government forces have encircled the east, cutting the sole supply route and raising fears of a humanitarian crisis for the estimated 250,000 people now under siege there.

The primary goal of the rebel assault is to seize the Ramussa neighborhood on the southern outskirts of Aleppo, said observatory director Rami Abdel Rahman.

“The road that runs through Ramussa is the main supply route for regime forces going to the areas they control in western Aleppo,” he said.

“Ramussa is also the main road that civilians use to move in and out of the government-held parts of the city.”




 

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