BEIRUT // Shelling and air raids by Syrian government forces killed at least 20 civilians and wounded or trapped 200 on Saturday in rebel-held Douma east of Damascus, a monitoring group said.
The latest deaths came just six days after regime air strikes killed more than 100 people, sparking international condemnation of one of the bloodiest government attacks in Syria’s war.
“At least 20 civilians were killed in the heavy shelling and air attacks since (Saturday) morning on Douma,” said Rami Abdel Rahman, head of the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.
He said around 200 more were either wounded or still trapped under rubble, and that the death toll was expected to rise.
The Syrian Revolution General Commission, an activist group that publishes daily updates on the country’s conflict, said women and children were among those killed.
“Wounded and dead are still being removed from under the rubble,” the SRGC said in an emailed statement.
The Local Coordination Committees activist network said Saturday’s bombardment struck four adjacent buildings.
Photographs published online by a local activist group called the Douma Coordination Committee depicted a young, bloodied child being carried across a field of concrete rubble.
In the pictures, volunteers searched through crumbling buildings, some missing entire walls, hoping to find survivors.
A child caked with blood and dust lay in a field clinic, his eyes half-open as a medic tended to him.
Douma is part of the rebel-held Eastern Ghouta area, which is regularly targeted by regime shelling and bombardment and has been under a suffocating siege for nearly two years.
On Saturday, government air strikes also hit the Eastern Ghouta town of Harasta, where troops loyal to embattled President Bashar Al Assad were clashing with hardline rebels, the Britain-based Observatory said.
* Agence France-Presse

