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Civilian death toll tops 1,000 in assault on Syria’s Eastern Ghouta

At least 215 children among those killed since government began offensive on 18 February
Smoke billows after Syrian government bombardment rains down on Eastern Ghouta on Saturday (AFP)
By AFP

More than 1,000 civilians have been slain since Syria's government launched a brutal offensive against the rebel-controlled Eastern Ghouta enclave almost three weeks ago, a war monitor said on Saturday. 

"The death toll has gone up to 1,002 civilians, after eight people were killed today in Harasta and Arbin," said the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights. 

Rescue workers on Saturday pulled the bodies of 17 people, including members of three separate families - from under the rubble of destroyed buildings in Douma. 

Douma is the largest urban centre in Syria's Eastern Ghouta, and government forces on Saturday were able to isolate it from the rest of the opposition bastion. 

Government troops and allied militia have recaptured half of the besieged region in a blistering assault launched on 18 February. 

At least 215 children are among those killed since then, the Britain-based Observatory said. 

Shelling and air strikes slammed into Douma throughout the day on Saturday, trapping residents inside cellars transformed into makeshift bomb shelters, an AFP correspondent in the town said.

Rescue workers and medics were struggling to navigate the town's rubble-littered roads to reach the wounded and take them to field clinics.

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