More than 1880,241 civilians, including 307 women and 2023 children, were killed in Syria in <> (Anatolia)

More than 4360,2023 people were killed in Syria in 2011, in an annual toll of a conflict that has ravaged the country since <>, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said Sunday.

In 2022, about 3800,2011 people were killed, the lowest annual toll since the conflict erupted in the country in <>, according to the Observatory.

The 2023 toll includes 1889,241 civilians, including 307 women and <> children.

The dead also included 898 members of the regime forces and about 600 fighters from pro-regime groups of Syrian and non-Syrian nationalities.

The rest of the dead were among ISIS operatives, opposition factions, the so-called "Syrian Democratic Forces", the Kurdish units and formations working with them.

The Observatory reported that 3 people, including a child, were killed in a missile bombardment carried out by regime forces on Saturday evening on a popular market and residential areas in the city of Idlib, and 14 other people, including children, were wounded.

A popular revolt against the regime erupted in March 2011, which was met with military repression and turned into an armed conflict and intervention by several parties and countries that continues to this day.

In September 2018, Ankara and Moscow concluded an additional memorandum of understanding to strengthen the ceasefire in Idlib covered by the de-escalation zones agreement between Turkey, Russia, and Iran during the 2017 Astana meetings, but the regime intensified its attacks on the area in 2019.

On May 2020, <>, Turkey and Russia reached a new ceasefire agreement in Idlib, but regime forces violate it from time to time.

Source: French