Suspected government air strikes killed at least 44 civilians at markets in northwestern Syria yesterday, as opposition chiefs said they were leaving peace talks in Geneva because of such attacks.
In some of the deadliest violence since a ceasefire took effect in February, a suspected regime bombing raid hit a market in the city of Maaret al-Numan, killing at least 37 civilians, a monitor said.
Footage showed bloodied bodies scattered among twisted metal stalls in a street strewn with fruit and vegetables.
Another strike on a fish market in the nearby town of Kafranbel killed seven civilians, said the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a Britain-based monitoring group.
The strikes were in Idlib province, which is under the control of Al Qaeda’s Syrian offshoot Al Nusra Front.
Like the Islamic State group, Al Nusra is excluded from the ceasefire and regime forces have continued offensives in areas under its control.
The main opposition High Negotiations Committee condemned the strike on Maaret al-Numan as a “massacre” and clear violation of the truce.
“It is a dangerous escalation of an already fragile situation, showing contempt for the whole international community at a time when there is supposed to be a cessation of hostilities,” said spokesman Salem al-Meslet.
The raid was “Assad’s response” to the HNC’s decision to suspend its formal participation in negotiations.
“Our decision to postpone our participation in the Geneva talks was taken to highlight the cynicism of the regime in pretending to negotiate while escalating the violence... The world must not ignore this challenge,” said Meslet.
The troubled talks - the latest in a long series of efforts to end Syria’s five-year conflict - failed to get off the ground this week despite hopes brought on by the ceasefire.
The partial truce, brokered by the US and Russia, led to a dramatic drop in violence across Syria but a recent surge in fighting, especially around second city Aleppo, has raised fears of its total collapse.
The opposition announced on Monday it was putting its participation on hold to protest escalating violence and restrictions on humanitarian access.
HNC co-ordinator Riyad Hijab said yesterday that he and other delegates were beginning to leave Geneva.
“I will be travelling today along with some of my colleagues from the HNC. Some people left yesterday and today and they will keep leaving gradually until Friday,” he said.
“It is not suitable, neither morally nor on the humanitarian side, to be part of negotiations when Syrians are dying daily from sieges, hunger, bombings, poisonous gases and barrel bombs.”
The UN has insisted the talks have not collapsed, with its envoy Staffan de Mistura saying they would continue through the week.
He said the indirect talks format - which has seen the HNC and Assad’s representatives meet separately with UN mediators - created flexibility to continue the discussions.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov also insisted the talks were “not frozen” and slammed the HNC as “capricious participants in the talks who are spoilt by their external patrons”.
This week’s talks are meant to focus on Syria’s political future, as the UN pushes a plan involving a transitional authority, a new constitution and eventual elections.
But Assad’s future has been the key sticking point, with the opposition insisting he must go and the regime refusing.
Speaking in Moscow, Lavrov said: “No one can win the war. All experts recognise this.
“There are some external players who dream about deposing the regime by force and try to do everything including disrupting the talks in Geneva.”


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