<p>A building collapsed Sunday in Syria's war-damaged second city of Aleppo, killing 16 people including children, with the search for survivors extending into the night.</p>.<p>Much of Aleppo was destroyed during Syria's conflict that began nearly 12 years ago and left many of the remaining structures in a decrepit state.</p>.<p>"The number of victims of the residential building collapse... has risen to 16 dead," said state news agency <em>SANA</em>. A war monitor said they were Syrians who had been displaced during the war.</p>.<p>Four people were rescued alive from the rubble, <em>SANA</em> reported, saying they were injured.</p>.<p>It gave earlier on Sunday an initial death toll of 10 people that increased throughout the day.</p>.<p>Dozens of rescue workers toiled at the site as darkness fell, an <em>AFP</em> correspondent said, and some used their bare hands to dig into the grey rubble.</p>.<p>Earth movers scooped up the pieces of building material, sending dust into the air, the correspondent added.</p>.<p>A Kurdish news agency reported five children were among the dead. One of them was an infant, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.</p>.<p>According to the interior ministry, the five-storey building was home to seven families. Locals told <em>AFP</em> about 35 people lived there.</p>.<p>Buildings in Aleppo, Syria's pre-war commercial hub, often collapse due to the dilapidated infrastructure as well as little oversight to ensure safety of new construction projects, some built illegally.</p>.<p><em>SANA</em> quoted a police source as saying that the building, in the city's Sheikh Maksoud neighbourhood, had collapsed "due to a water leak" in the foundations.</p>.<p>The neighbourhood is predominantly inhabited by Syrian Kurds who are under the authority of the People's Protection Units (YPG) militia, part of the Kurdish authorities' de facto army.</p>.<p>Aleppo itself is, however, under control of the government which took it back from rebels during devastating urban combat.</p>.<p>The British-based Syrian Observatory reported the victims were displaced people from Afrin, further north, where neighbouring Turkey carried out an offensive in 2018.</p>.<p>Nearly half a million people have been killed in Syria's conflict which began in 2011 and displaced about half of the country's pre-war population.</p>.<p>Many of those forced from their homes had to move into buildings that are structurally unsound, resulting in relatively frequent collapses.</p>.<p>Last September, a building collapse in the Ferdaws neighbourhood of Aleppo killed 10 people, including three children.</p>.<p>A war-damaged block of flats also crumbled in the city in February 2019, leaving 11 people dead with four children among them.</p>
<p>A building collapsed Sunday in Syria's war-damaged second city of Aleppo, killing 16 people including children, with the search for survivors extending into the night.</p>.<p>Much of Aleppo was destroyed during Syria's conflict that began nearly 12 years ago and left many of the remaining structures in a decrepit state.</p>.<p>"The number of victims of the residential building collapse... has risen to 16 dead," said state news agency <em>SANA</em>. A war monitor said they were Syrians who had been displaced during the war.</p>.<p>Four people were rescued alive from the rubble, <em>SANA</em> reported, saying they were injured.</p>.<p>It gave earlier on Sunday an initial death toll of 10 people that increased throughout the day.</p>.<p>Dozens of rescue workers toiled at the site as darkness fell, an <em>AFP</em> correspondent said, and some used their bare hands to dig into the grey rubble.</p>.<p>Earth movers scooped up the pieces of building material, sending dust into the air, the correspondent added.</p>.<p>A Kurdish news agency reported five children were among the dead. One of them was an infant, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.</p>.<p>According to the interior ministry, the five-storey building was home to seven families. Locals told <em>AFP</em> about 35 people lived there.</p>.<p>Buildings in Aleppo, Syria's pre-war commercial hub, often collapse due to the dilapidated infrastructure as well as little oversight to ensure safety of new construction projects, some built illegally.</p>.<p><em>SANA</em> quoted a police source as saying that the building, in the city's Sheikh Maksoud neighbourhood, had collapsed "due to a water leak" in the foundations.</p>.<p>The neighbourhood is predominantly inhabited by Syrian Kurds who are under the authority of the People's Protection Units (YPG) militia, part of the Kurdish authorities' de facto army.</p>.<p>Aleppo itself is, however, under control of the government which took it back from rebels during devastating urban combat.</p>.<p>The British-based Syrian Observatory reported the victims were displaced people from Afrin, further north, where neighbouring Turkey carried out an offensive in 2018.</p>.<p>Nearly half a million people have been killed in Syria's conflict which began in 2011 and displaced about half of the country's pre-war population.</p>.<p>Many of those forced from their homes had to move into buildings that are structurally unsound, resulting in relatively frequent collapses.</p>.<p>Last September, a building collapse in the Ferdaws neighbourhood of Aleppo killed 10 people, including three children.</p>.<p>A war-damaged block of flats also crumbled in the city in February 2019, leaving 11 people dead with four children among them.</p>