2017 Aleppo suicide car bombing | |
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Part of the Syrian Civil War | |
Location | Rashideen District, western Aleppo, Syria |
Coordinates | 36°10′10″N 37°03′24″E / 36.16944°N 37.05667°E |
Date | 15 April 2017 |
Weapons | Car bomb |
Deaths | 126+[1] |
Injured | 55+ |
Perpetrator | Unknown |
On 15 April 2017, a car bomb detonated near a convoy of buses in the al-Rashideen neighbourhood of western Aleppo, Syria.[2] The buses carried civilian evacuees from the besieged government-controlled towns of al-Fu'ah and Kafriya and were guarded by rebel fighters.[3] The bombing killed at least 126 people[4] including at least 80 children.[5]
The bus evacuation was part of an agreement brokered by the Syrian government, Iran, and Qatar, and implemented by the Syrian Arab Red Crescent.[6] Under the terms of the evacuation deal, residents of the Shia communities of al-Fu'ah and Kafriya, which supported the Syrian government[7] and were surrounded by the Army of Conquest,[8] would be transported to Aleppo.[6] In return, residents of Madaya and Al-Zabadani, which are Sunni-majority and support the opposition, would be transported to the Idlib province.[6]
Foua and Kefraya have been surrounded by Jaysh al-Fatah (Army of Conquest), led by al-Qaeda affiliate Jabhat al-Musra and Islamists Ahrar ash-Sham since March last year.