Syria: Mortar shells hit school and churches in centre of Damascus
Mortar shells damaged the Primary Christian School of St John Damascene yesterday in the district of Al-Qassaa in Damascus, killing five children and wounding 27 others. Another rocket hit a school bus in Bab Touma, a suburb in Damascus predominantly Christian, injuring five students. In the same area, a mortar shell hit St Cross Church, already hit in past days and another damaged the St Cyril Church. Three other people were killed by a rocket in the centre of the capital.
In past days, a rocket had also hit the Apostolic Nunciature, while on Sunday, November 10 a mortar shell had killed a Christian man with his four children. For days the historical centre and the most modern part of the center of Damascus have been the target of a rain of mortar shells by armed rebels nested in the surrounding neighborhoods, occupied by militants.
As a priest from Damascus explained to Fides: "neighborhoods are affected indiscriminately, just because they are the areas under the regular army control. And the civilian population pay the price. The suburbs, such as Jaramana, Kassaa, Malki of Damascus are being targeted, that are the most pluralistic, inhabited by people of different ethnicity and religion".
In a note sent to Fides, Fr Gabriel Dawood, a Syriac Orthodox priest of the Cathedral of St George in Damascus, said: "in our churches we continue to hope and to light candles, praying for all the faithful killed, and for those at risk, especially for the Christian villages threatened by armed gangs".
Source: Fides