Khan al-Assal Massacre

On Monday, July 22, it was reported, Syrian rebel forces took general control of Khan al-Assal, a Shia-majority district on the western edge of Aleppo which they had long fought for. Following this was a massacre by contested factions of the rebel forces. In one version, they executed at least 51 captured soldiers, after killing about 100 in battle. Another version has it that a total of 123 people, primarily civilians, were killed deliberately after the rebel victory, their bodies partly mutliated, burned, and dumped in a pit.

Khan al-Assal was the scene of an alleged chemical attack on March 19, which largely killed soldiers at a post in the government-held district. Interestingly, a hard-won UN investigation under Swedish scientist Ake Sellstrom was finally prepared to visit and study the incident as Damascus requested on March 20. But this change of hands came two days before Sellstrom's planned arrival which suddenly made a trip there all but impossible.

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