The Syrian Observatory For Human Rights

Need a clear shot at Assad’s forces? There’s an app for that!

A group of Syrian rebels battling President Bashar al-Assad’s forces have been pictured using an Apple iPad device to ensure the firing angle of a rocket launcher is correct.

Militants loyal to the hardline Jaish al-Islam group were photographed using the tablet to test the firing position of crude howitzer artillery pieces during street battles in the capital Damascus.

It is believed that the rebels use maps and intelligence reports to locate the regime troops’ positions, before employing the high-tech device to give a precision reading of the weapon’s firing angle in the hope it will boost the accuracy of the missiles.

The militants using the tablet to check the firing angle of the howitzer belong to Jaish al-Islam – a coalition of conservative Islamist rebel groups who are fighting the Assad regime on one front, while battling ISIS [Daesh] and the Al Qaeda-backed Jabhat al-Nusra on several others.

Although it is not the largest rebel force in Syria, Jaish al-Islam makes up the largest group battling regime forces in and around the capital and regime stronghold Damascus.

The images come as a Syrian army aircraft crashed during a bombing run over rebel-held Ariha yesterday, killing at least 31 people and destroying a vegetable market.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said it was not immediately clear how many of the deaths in the northwestern town had resulted from the crash and how many were killed in the bombing run.

‘It was flying at a low altitude when it had mechanical failure,’ Observatory chief Rami Abdel Rahman said.

‘At least 31 people, including two children, were killed. Five of them have not been identified,’ said Abdel Rahman, citing medical officials and residents inside the town.

He said at least 60 people were wounded in the attack on Ariha, which is in Syria’s northwest province of Idlib.

Security officials reached in Damascus would not confirm whether a regime aircraft had crashed in the area.

The official news agency SANA reported only that army units had destroyed ammunition warehouses and attacked ‘terrorist groups’ in Ariha.

Residents cited by the Observatory said the plane crashed near a vegetable market, causing ‘a huge blast’ in the town, the scene of heavy destruction in previous regime bombardment.

Local activist Ibrahim al-Idlibi, speaking to AFP via the Internet, said the blast was caused by the remaining rockets and bombs on the plane.

‘It destroyed the entire market, as well as residential buildings near the market,’ he said.

Local civil defence workers were scrambling to rescue anyone buried under the rubble, he said.

‘The wounded have been taken to field hospitals inside Ariha and in nearby Jabal al-Zawiya, because there is such a high number,’ he added.

The Observatory, which relies on a wide network of activists, medics and fighters throughout war-torn Syria, said the fate of the plane’s crew was unknown.

The Damascus regime has relied heavily on its monopoly of air power in Syria’s four-year-old civil war, repeatedly pounding rebel-held towns.

It has lost a number of aircraft, some to rebel fire and others to mechanical failure.

In mid-January, at least 35 government troops were killed when a military aircraft crashed in Idlib.

The province, which borders Turkey, has since been largely overrun by a rebel alliance including Al-Qaeda affiliate Al-Nusra Front.

The Army of Conquest alliance seized Idlib city on March 28, heralding a string of victories in the province including the capture of Ariha exactly two months later.

 

ALBAWABA