The deaths occurred when
air strikes struck the Al-Kammouna camp near Sarmada, in Idlib province, the
Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.
Twenty-eight people in a
refugee camp in northern Syria were killed on Thursday despite a ceasefire
taking hold in Aleppo, it has been claimed.
The area is controlled by
Syria's al Qaeda-linked al Nusra Front.
Observatory chief Rami
Abdel Rahman said women and children were among the 28 civilians who were
killed, with around 50 others wounded.
Mamun al Khatib, director
of the Aleppo-based pro-rebel Shahba Press news agency, claimed the attack had
been carried out by Syrian "regime aircraft".
The European Union called
the bombings "unacceptable", while an official with the United
Nations said there should be an immediate investigation.
On Wednesday, a ceasefire
was extended to Aleppo following two weeks of violence in which hundreds had
lost their lives.
US Secretary of State John
Kerry announced the truce had taken effect on Wednesday night and that violence
had already fallen off.
In Aleppo, the Jaish al
Islam (Army of Islam) rebel force said the group would respect the truce.
Mediators hope that peace
talks backed by the UN could resume later this month in Geneva, although
previous rounds have failed to make a major breakthrough.
In central Homs province,
another 12 civilians including two women died in a suicide attack and a car
bombing on Thursday, the Observatory and state television said.

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