INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Two children and a baby have been pulled to safety from a house hit by an airstrike, as the Syrian regime continues its final push to clear
rebels from Idlib.Covered in dust, they are seen as they are carried from the wrecked building and put into an ambulance, in footage from a
member of the White Helmets rescue team.Two of the children were bloodied but did not appear seriously injured.President Bashar al Assad's
forces are trying to defeat the last of the rebels and complete victory in the bloody nine-year civil war that has devastated the
country.Image:Two of the children were bloodied but did not appear seriously injuredHundreds of thousands of displaced people are in the
firing line after large numbers fled to Idlib - a city and province in Syria's northwest close to the Turkish border.Many have taken to the
road to try to escape the violence.The latest strikes killed a dozen people in Idlib, according to UK-based monitoring group The Syrian
Observatory for Human Rights.Image:Masses of displaced people are trying to escape the violence in IdlibRescuers said Syrian and Russia
planes had attacked a number of towns in the province, while the UN says hundreds of civilians have died in recent bombings.Mr Assad's
forces are supported by Russian warplanes, which control the skies over Idlib, as well as Iran-backed militias, while Turkey is backing some
rebel groups.Image:Syrian rebels posed with a regime helicopter that was shot downOn Tuesday, a Syrian regime helicopter was shot down by
the rebels near the village of Nairab, with video showing it spiralling from the sky in a fiery crash.Tensions between Turkey and the
Syria-Russia alliance are also increasing.Turkey, which has taken in more than three million refugees, has warned it will attack Syrian
forces "by any means necessary" if more of its soldiers are hurt.Image:Turkish-backed Syrian fighters in the town of Sarmin, about 8 km from
the city of IdlibIt has observation posts and two military positions in Syrian territory, but 13 of its troops have been killed by shelling
in the last 10 days.President Recep Tayyip Erdogan warned: "If there is the smallest injury to our soldiers on the observation posts or
other places, I am declaring from here that we will hit the regime forces everywhere from today, regardless of Idlib's borders or the lines
of the Sochi agreement.""We will do this by any means necessary, by air or ground, without hesitating, without allowing for any stalling,"
he addedTurkey is sending a delegation to Moscow in the coming days to discuss the conflict, and the Kremlin said President Vladimir Putin
and Mr Erdogan had spoken by phone on Wednesday.