At least 4,420 people were killed in Syria violence during the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan, some two thirds of them fighters on both sides, a monitoring group said Thursday.
Compared with August last year, when the majority of the dead were civilians, fewer ordinary people were killed this Ramadan.
“More than 4,420 were killed over the past month,” Syrian Observatory for Human Rights director Rami Abdel Rahman told AFP.
Of the total, 1,386 were civilians, 64 defectors who joined the rebels and 1,172 civilians who had taken up arms on the opposition side.
Of the civilians killed, 302 were children, said the watchdog.
A further 485 were foreign jihadists who joined the rebels, the Observatory said.
Another 1,010 of the dead were loyalist troops, while 211 were members of the pro-regime paramilitary National Defence Force, it said.
Ninety-two others remained unidentified.
“What we see is that the majority of those killed were fighters,” Abdel Rahman told AFP.
The toll contrasts sharply with that of August 2012, which had been the deadliest month in Syria’s conflict until then. In that month, 5,440 were killed, among them 4,114 civilians.
As the revolt has grown increasingly militarised, and as the battle lines have changed, the nature of the conflict has shifted.
“Civilians have fled formerly populated areas that have become battlefields, for areas firmly under either the regime, the opposition or the Kurds,” said Abdel Rahman.
Parts of the north are now in Kurdish hands, others in the north and east are under rebel control and much of the centre is in army hands.
“Civilians are constantly on the move, looking for areas that are uncontestedly under a power that they can identify with and feel safe under,” Abdel Rahman added.
More than 100,000 people have been killed in Syria’s war, the United Nations says, and millions more have been displaced.
Ahram
Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.