Suspected U.S. Airstrike Hits School Sheltering Displaced People In Syria

Dozens of civilian casualties are reported.
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BEIRUT (Reuters) - At least 33 people were killed in an airstrike that hit a school sheltering displaced people near the Islamic State-held city of Raqqa, a group that monitors the war in Syria said on Wednesday.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said it believed the strike was carried out by the U.S.-led coalition against Islamic State.

Observatory activists had counted at least 33 bodies at the site near the village of al-Mansoura, west of Raqqa, Observatory Director Rami Abdulrahman told Reuters. The air strike took place on Monday night, he said.

The U.S.-led coalition has escalated its aerial campaign against the militant group around Raqqa this month, causing numerous civilian casualties, Abdulrahman said.

The nearest Islamic State installation to the site of the air strike was a religious school 3 km (1.9 miles) away, he said.

A spokesman for the U.S.-led coalition has previously said that it does everything it can to avoid civilian casualties and that it investigates those that are reported as a result of its air strikes.

The Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), a Kurdish-led group of militias backed by the U.S.-led coalition, is fighting to isolate Raqqa ahead of an anticipated assault on the city, which Islamic State has used as a command node to plan attacks abroad.

The head of the YPG militia, the strongest in the SDF, said last week that the offensive to retake Raqqa would begin in early April but a spokesman for the U.S. Pentagon said no decision had yet been made.

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Before You Go

Syria's Children Draw Messages For Peace
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A drawing made by a child in Damascus. (credit:AID TO THE CHURCH IN NEED)
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Children at a Greek Orthodox school in Syria. (credit:AID TO THE CHURCH IN NEED)
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Children at a school in Jaramana, about 10 km outside of Damascus. (credit:AID TO THE CHURCH IN NEED)
(04 of20)
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Kids from Jaramana hold up their artwork. (credit:AID TO THE CHURCH IN NEED)
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Religious sisters hold up drawings from different schools in Damascus. (credit:AID TO THE CHURCH IN NEED)
(06 of20)
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Children in Aleppo participate in the Action Day for Peace. (credit:AID TO THE CHURCH IN NEED)
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The kids were invited to draw messages of peace. (credit:AID TO THE CHURCH IN NEED)
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Kids in Aleppo concentrate as they draw. (credit:AID TO THE CHURCH IN NEED)
(09 of20)
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A child in Aleppo pauses while drawing. (credit:AID TO THE CHURCH IN NEED)
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A delegation of Catholic and Orthodox leaders will present the children's drawings to leaders at the European Parliament and the United Nations. (credit:AID TO THE CHURCH IN NEED)
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In addition to drawings, these Syrian schoolchildren in Aleppo wrote messages to the global community on white balloons. (credit:AID TO THE CHURCH IN NEED)
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These messages on the balloons included phrases like, "We want peace!" "Give us our childhood!" and "We don't want any more war!" (credit:AID TO THE CHURCH IN NEED)
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A child in Aleppo stands with a balloon. (credit:AID TO THE CHURCH IN NEED)
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Children in Damascus rally for peace. (credit:AID TO THE CHURCH IN NEED)
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A rally for peace led by youngsters in Aleppo. (credit:AID TO THE CHURCH IN NEED)
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A student in Aleppo shows off her artwork. (credit:AID TO THE CHURCH IN NEED)
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Kids in Aleppo participate in the Action Day for Peace. (credit:AID TO THE CHURCH IN NEED)
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The initiative was the result of a joint collaboration between the Catholic and Orthodox churches. (credit:AID TO THE CHURCH IN NEED)
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A child is helped by staff during a peace rally. (credit:AID TO THE CHURCH IN NEED)
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A child in Marmarita, a Syrian village, participates in the Action Day For Peace. (credit:AID TO THE CHURCH IN NEED)