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Red Cross chief meets Assad in Syria
The Red Cross chief is on a visit to Syria to emphasise the humanitarian crisis and has met President Bashar al-Assad as fighting continues to rage.
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Red Cross chief Peter Maurer is in Syria on a mercy mission amid a surge of bombings and clashes in the capital and the second city Aleppo that has left scores more dead, a spokeswoman says.
Maurer's mission will "focus on increased humanitarian needs and to remind the belligerents of their obligation under international law related to the protection of civilians" in particular, International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) spokeswoman in Damascus Rabab Rifai said on Tuesday.
Making his first visit to violence-racked Syria since being appointed as ICRC head on July 1, Maurer had met with President Bashar al-Assad and is slated to meet senior officials, including Foreign Minister Walid Muallem, Rifai said, but gave no timings.
The visit comes amid a surge in violence in the past weeks across Syria, where according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights more than 5000 people were killed in the month of August alone.
The Britain-based watchdog, which relies on its information from a network of activists on the ground, said 153 people died countrywide on Monday - 72 civilians, including 19 children and 14 women, 42 soldiers and 30 rebels.
Among those killed was an entire family - including seven children - when a government air raid hit their home in the heart of Aleppo, witnesses told an AFP correspondent in Syria's second city.
A fighter jet also struck in nearby Al-Bab, killing at least 18 people, with more unaccounted for beneath the rubble of flattened homes, the Observatory said. Doctors said nine people died.
An activist said that on Tuesday, several districts of the northern city were bombarded with artillery and mortar fire as was an area near the Aleppo airport, bordering the Nayrab district in the southwest of the city.
A senior commander in charge of the regime offensive on Aleppo told AFP that the army would recapture the city from the rebel forces "within 10 days".
Some 3000 troops were involved in the fight against about 7000 "terrorists", said the general, adding that 2000 of the insurgents had been killed since the assault on Aleppo was launched at the start of August.
In the capital Damascus, fighting broke out in the Yarmuk Palestinian refugee camp early on Tuesday between members of the PFLP (Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine) and rebel fighters, the Observatory said.
It also reported fighting between rebels and the army in the capital's southern district of Tadamun, which is adjacent to the camp.
The Syrian Revolution General Council, a network of opposition activists, said that panicked residents were fleeing the Yarmuk camp in droves amid the fighting.
On Monday, a car bomb ripped through the mainly Christian and Druze Damascus suburb of Jaramana, killing at least five people, according to the Observatory.
In Madrid, the opposition Syrian National Council appealed to the international community for weapons and urgent military intervention to defend civilians from such attacks.
"We need a humanitarian intervention and we are asking for military intervention for the Syrian civilians," SNC chairman Abdel Basset Sayda said. "I have the duty of asking for weapons that will allow us to defend against the Syrian armour and weapons."
Sayda said the conflict had now killed 30,000 people and forced millions from their homes, including more than three million displaced inside the country and 250,000 who had fled abroad. Another 100,000 had been detained.
The plight of civilians was at the forefront of the ICRC mission to Syria, Maurer said in a statement issued on Monday in Geneva.
"At a time when more and more civilians are being exposed to extreme violence, it is of the utmost importance that we and the Syrian Arab Red Crescent succeed in significantly scaling up our humanitarian response," the ICRC chief said.
His talks with Syrian officials would largely deal with the deteriorating humanitarian situation in Syria, as well as the difficulties the ICRC and the Red Crescent face as they try to reach people affected by the armed conflict, the statement said.
According to the Observatory, more than 26,000 people have been killed in Syria since the revolt began in March last year - more than two-thirds of them civilians.
In Ankara, a US official told AFP that CIA director Petraeus was in Turkey for regional meetings, without elaborating.
His visit comes less than two weeks after Turkish and US officials held their first operational planning meetings aimed at bringing an end to the Assad regime.
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