Warplanes crossed the skies over key battleground areas in another bloody day in Syria. Here are the latest developments in the 18-month crisis:
On the ground: Fire from the air
The Syrian military bombarded Aleppo and Damascus provinces Saturday, the opposition Local Coordination Committees (LCC) of Syria said.
Across the country, at least 178 people were killed Saturday -- 89 of them in Aleppo alone -- said the LCC, a network of opposition activists. Fifteen were "summarily executed" in Douma and nine were executed in Hirak in Daraa province, according to the group.
Amateur videos showed people running towards the scene of explosions in Aleppo and pulling out bodies from the rubble.
The LCC said government forces were taking aim at water supply lines but state media denied that accusation.
State-run media said Syrian armed forces had killed "a big number of terrorist mercenaries" in the Deir al-Asafir area near Damascus and arrested many of their leaders. From the beginning, President Bashar al-Assad has refused to acknowledge the popular uprising and blamed the bloodshed as the work of armed thugs.
The region: Rockets land in Iraq
Four rockets fired from Syria landed across the Iraqi border in the town of al-Qaim, Iraqi Interior Ministry officials said Saturday. The rockets fell on a residential area, killing a 4-year-old girl.
A ministry statement said although Iraq has remained neutral in the Syrian conflict, it was ready to respond in the event of another such attack.
Syria has been accused before of staging attacks in Iraq. After the U.S.-led invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein, the U.S. military routinely blamed Sunni insurgents and foreign fighters from Syria for inciting violence in Iraq.
Al-Qaim is home to a Syrian refugee center. About 4,000 people have crossed into Iraq from the Albu Kamal area of eastern Syria.
In and out of Syrian prisons: State media reports 277 inmates released
The state-run SANA news agency reported Saturday that "277 persons who were misled into getting involved in the recent events" have been released from detention in Homs.
All those freed have "hands (that) are clean of the Syrians' blood," according to the SANA report. Several "turned themselves in after realizing the scope of the conspiracy targeting Syria in implementation of foreign agendas," the state news agency said.
They returned to their homes intent on moving "on with their lives to help build their society."
This is one of several recent mass releases of detainees, according to SANA. On August 27, 332 people on Damascus, 38 in Homs and 20 in Hama who weren't accused of "committing murder" were freed "after pledging to not carry arms again."
World response: Humanitarian help
In Cyprus, just a few miles west by sea from Syria, European Union foreign ministers concluded talks on the growing humanitarian crisis in Syria.
Without a United Nations Security Council mandate to take stronger international action, the world community must continue all it call to support a a political solution, said EU Foreign Policy Chief Catherine Ashton.

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