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UN waiting to deliver aid following deadly Syrian attacks

Syrian civilians flee from Houla near Homs, September 9, 2012, after government forces shelled a number of areas in northern Syria, part of efforts by the regime to target rebel strongholds.Troops used planes to hit several homes in Aleppo, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights. UPI
Syrian civilians flee from Houla near Homs, September 9, 2012, after government forces shelled a number of areas in northern Syria, part of efforts by the regime to target rebel strongholds.Troops used planes to hit several homes in Aleppo, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights. UPI | License Photo

DAMASCUS, Syria, Jan. 29 (UPI) -- Syrian security forces killed at least 83 people, including eight children and three women, in attacks across the country Tuesday, a human rights group said.

The Syrian Network for Human Rights, based in London, said the government forces killed 13 people in the Damascus suburbs, 37 people in Aleppo, 17 in Homs, eight in Hama, four in Daraa and two in both Idlib and Quneitra.

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The Syrian Revolution General Commission, another activist group, posted a video online that shows a child being pulled from wreckage after Syrian forces bombed a home in Aleppo.

More than 100,000 people have been killed in the three-year conflict, the Andalou Agency reported, and more than 2 million have fled the country.

The United Nations said its trucks are in Syria waiting to deliver food and medicine to 500 families who have been trapped in the Old City of Homs without any aid for almost two years.

The UN is waiting for approval from the warring parties before delivering the supplies, the U.N. News Center said.

Trapped civilians' need for humanitarian aid is one of the top problems being discussed during negotiations between the Syrian government and the main opposition group in Geneva, Switzerland.

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The talks will go on until at least Friday.

"I will repeat again that these are not easy negotiations and they haven't been easy today, they haven't been ... these past days and they will probably not be easy in the coming few days," U.N. Arab League Special Representative Lakhdar Brahimi said.

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