Suspected coalition air strike kills seven members of same family, activists claim
The alleged bombings took place on an Isis-held town near Aleppo

A suspected US-led coalition airstrike on a northern Syrian village killed seven members of the same family, activists have said.
Arshaf, held by Islamic State militants, lies near the front lines of the war between the extremist group and U.S.-backed Syrian rebels. Recent advances by the rebels, backed by coalition airstrikes, have eaten away at Isis territory near the Turkish border.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a Britain-based group that monitors the Syria conflict through local observers, said the planes responsible for the Arshaf strikes were seen to cross into Syrian airspace from Turkey. It said the strikes killed seven family members, among them five women and a child.
The Local Coordination Committees activist network said 10 people were killed.
Arshaf lies five miles (eight kilometres) from the contested town of Marea, north of the city of Aleppo.
To the east, in the city of Raqqa, where the extremist group has maintained its de facto capital since 2014, mosques broadcast an announcement that civilians would be allowed to leave the city to the countryside, after planes thought to belong to the international coalition dropped flyers on the city instructing residents to leave, a local group reported.
The group Raqqa Is Being Slaughtered Silently, which smuggles information out of the Isis territory, said the illustrated flyers, scattered over the city Thursday and Friday, show a family fleeing a dark, urban war zone where three Isis militants appear to lie dead by the side of the road to a sun-lit, hilly, green countryside scene. "The time you have been waiting for has arrived. It is time to depart Raqqa," the flyer says.
Join our commenting forum
Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies
Comments