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This citizen journalism image provided by Edlib News Network, ENN, and released on Saturday, May 4, 2013, which has been authenticated based on its contents and other AP reporting, shows dead bodies in Banias, Syria. Thousands of Sunni Muslims fled a Syrian coastal town Saturday, a day after reports circulated that dozens of people, including children, had been killed by pro-government gunmen in the area, activists said. Image Credit: AP

Beirut: The commander of the Minnigh military airport in northern Syria, the scene of fierce fighting between government troops and rebel forces, has been killed, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said on Sunday.

“General Ali Mahmoud was killed on Saturday with two of his bodyguards inside the airport, where fighting is ongoing,” Observatory director Rami Abdul Rahman told AFP.

“The rebels have advanced, but they have not yet taken control” of the facility, he added.

Since the beginning of this year, rebel fighters have been trying to seize a string of northern airports, including Aleppo international airport, and the Jarrah, Kwiyres, Minnigh and Nayrab military fields.

They took Jarrah military airport on February 12.

Elsewhere, the Observatory reported regime air raids on the Jobar neighbourhood of Damascus and against the rebel-held town of Raqa.

There were also sporadic air raids against the orchards south of Banias, where the bodies of 62 people were found on Saturday after an assault by government forces.

The opposition has said a growing number of reported killings raises the spectre of a campaign of “ethnic cleansing” in Syria.

Violence throughout the country on Saturday left at least 148 people dead, including 40 civilians, 74 rebels and 34 soldiers, the Observatory said.