BEIRUT: The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a British-based activists group, said Thursday that at least 38 civilians were killed in airstrikes carried out by a U.S.-led coalition in Hassakeh province in northeast Syria in the past two days.
The United States and its allies are carrying out air raids in the area against ISIS, which controls some parts of Hassakeh province but has lost ground in recent months.
Hassakeh borders mostly ISIS-held Deir al-Zor province and Raqqa, the group’s de facto capital in Syria.
The death toll published by the Observatory, which tracks the war using a network of contacts on the ground, included at least 15 people killed when strikes hit a bakery in the city of al-Shadadi near the border with Iraq on Tuesday.
Air raids in at least three other villages killed 15 others Thursday, including three children, while eight more civilians died in airstrikes elsewhere, it said. Reuters could not independently confirm the reports.
U.S. Lieutenant General Charles Brown, head of U.S. Air Forces Central Command, said he was aware of the report of civilian casualties. The U.S.-led coalition will begin assessing the credibility of those reports and start an investigation if required, he added.
“I do know that we’ve been striking at that area over the past several days,” Brown said.
Separate raids near the town of Al-Hawl, near the Iraqi border, and farther south killed 35 ISIS fighters, the Observatory said.
The U.S.-led coalition has also been hitting ISIS areas of control in Iraq.
Washington backs the Syria Democratic Forces in Syria, an alliance of Kurdish YPG fighters and other groups fighting the extremists on the ground and which took Al-Hawl from ISIS in November.
The YPG has been the most effective partner against ISIS in Syria for the U.S.-led coalition, and took swathes of territory from the group last year.
The SDF said on its Facebook page on Thursday that it was launching another offensive, this time to capture al-Shadadi, an ISIS logistics hub located on a network of highways. Its capture would isolate Raqqa.
Russia is carrying out its own air campaign in Syria, hitting some ISIS targets, but mostly focusing on insurgents fighting Moscow’s ally President Bashar Assad in the west of the country.