The toll from heavy government bombardment of a rebel stronghold outside the Syrian capital rose today to 34 civilians, including 12 children, a monitoring group said.
"There are now 34 civilians that were killed in Saturday's attacks on Douma, among them 12 children and eight women," said Rami Abdel Rahman, director of the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.
Forces loyal to President Bashar al-Assad struck the rebel-held town of Douma with shells and aerial attacks yesterday.
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"Overnight, they found more victims underneath the rubble, and others who were wounded died," Abdel Rahman said today.
He said some of the strikes had killed whole families inside their homes.
Local volunteers and civil defence teams worked Sunday morning to locate seven people who were still unaccounted for, the Britain-based Observatory said.
The Douma Coordination Committee, a local activist group, published the names and photos of documented casualties on its Facebook page.
One of the photos showed a toddler, which the group said had been rescued from beneath the rubble but succumbed to his wounds shortly afterwards.
At least six air strikes targeted the Eastern Ghouta area, of which Douma is a part, on Sunday, but the Observatory had no details on casualties.
On August 16, a series of regime strikes left more than 117 people -- mostly civilians -- dead in Douma, sparking international condemnation of the Assad regime.
Eastern Ghouta has been under a government siege for nearly two years and is regularly targeted by regime aerial attacks.
Syria's war, which began in March 2011 with anti-regime protests, has spiralled into a multi-front conflict that has killed more than 240,000 people.