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While life largely carries on as normal for the citizens of Damascus' government-controlled west, it is a far more brutal existence for those in the rebel-held east. For while children still attend school, go to work in al-Quassaa on the Assad regime's side, weary citizens seek shelter in basements and await the next air strike in the Jobar district.
Heart-breaking satellite imagery has now laid bear a tale of two cities β the east flattened by shelling and barren; the west seemingly unscathed by drawn-out bloodshed. Eastern Ghouta is a rebel stronghold on the edge of the capital Damascus which has been outside government control since and is thought to be home to some , civilians. Since the near total collapse of the Islamic State group's once sprawling 'caliphate', Damascus has looked bent on completing its reconquest and Eastern Ghouta is a key target.
The regime intensified its air campaign there early this month with devastating results - the United Nations estimates three quarters of private housing has been damaged. Much of the population has moved underground, with families pitching tents in basements and venturing out only to assess damage to their property and buy food, a trip that frequently turns deadly amid the falling shells and bombs. Smoke rises after Assad Regime's airstrike hit residential areas in Eastern Ghouta, Damascus yesterday.
On Sunday, a child died and 13 others suffered breathing difficulties and showed symptoms consistent with a chlorine attack after a regime air raid struck the town of Al-Shifuniyah, the Observatory and a medic said. A boy was reportedly killed by Syrian regime rocket fire four hours into a 'humanitarian pause' ceasefire, agreed to by the government and ordered by its Russian ally. Seven people were also injured during the shelling in the town of Jisreen in eastern Ghouta, The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitoring group said.
The truce had been set up to allow civilians to leave eastern Ghouta, after a week-long government offensive killed more than people, including more than children, according to reports. Syrians inspect the debris of buildings destroyed by Syrian forces' missile strikes in eastern Ghouta, where some people have been killed in Russia-backed government attacks. Syrian children and adults receive treatment for a suspected chemical attack at a makeshift clinic on the rebel-held village of al-Shifuniyah in the Eastern Ghouta in recent weeks.