Syria war: Air strikes on Atareb market 'kill more than 50'

AFP A Syrian man carries a child following a reported air strike on the rebel-held town of Atareb in northern Syria on 13 November 2017AFP
Atareb is home to thousands of Syrians displaced by their country's civil war

At least 53 people are reported to have been killed in air strikes on a rebel-held town in northern Syria.

A market was hit, with video on social media showing widespread destruction. Rubble covers the streets and panicked civilians are seen carrying away the injured.

Eyewitnesses say there were three separate strikes.

It is not clear whether the strike was carried out by Syrian government warplanes or those of its ally Russia.

The town is located in an area of Aleppo province that is part of a "de-escalation zone" established earlier this year by Russia and Iran - which support the Syrian government - and Turkey, which backs the rebels.

The zones are credited for creating a drop in violence, but intermittent clashes have continued while humanitarian access is minimal.

The area is largely held by opposition forces and a jihadist group formerly affiliated to Al-Qaeda.

AFP Aftermath of a reported air strike on a market in the rebel-held town of Atareb in northern Syria on 13 November 2017AFP
It is not clear whether the strike was carried out by Syrian government or Russian warplanes

The UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which monitors the country's civil war through a network of sources on the ground, said children were among those killed.

Both the Observatory, and The Syria Civil Defence, whose rescue workers are also known as the White Helmets, gave the death toll as 53.

A journalist for the pro-opposition news website Zaman Al Wasl, Ahmed Primo, tweeted that three Russian warplanes had fired missiles at the market.

The entire market, which contained more than 100 shops, was destroyed, he said.

AFP Aftermath of a reported air strike on a market in the rebel-held town of Atareb in northern Syria on 13 November 2017AFP
Atareb is supposedly protected by a "de-escalation" agreement between the warring parties

Photographs published by AFP news agency showed the aftermath of the attack, including the bodies of three young children laid out in a street, partly covered by plastic sheets and a sack.

Other images showed rescue workers pulling victims and survivors from the rubble of destroyed buildings.

Atareb is home to tens of thousands of Syrians who have been displaced by fighting that is believed to have left at least 400,000 people dead since 2011.