No less than 82 individuals have been murdered in a string of Syrian government air strikes on a commercial center in Douma, a radical held town close Damascus, activists said. 
No less than 200 individuals were harmed, with the loss of life, the greater part of them regular folks, liable to ascend the same number of the injured were in a genuine condition, the UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said on Sunday.

The common barrier in Douma put the loss of life at 100. 

Firas Abdullah, a neighborhood picture taker in Douma, told Al Jazeera that this was the principle market in the town. 

"The business sector has constantly swarmed with individuals purchasing and offering to bring home the bacon," he said. 

The assault available is the second in a week. On Wednesday, air strikes on the zone left no less than 27 individuals killed, Abdullah said. 

Abdel Rahman said local people had assembled at the site after the first strike to help empty the injured when more assaults hit. 

"The preparatory data proposes the greater part of the dead are regular citizens," he said. 

A feature posted online by activists of the fallout of the assaults demonstrated a crossing point strewn with rubble and bent metal. 

The fronts of a few structures close-by seemed to have been sheared off by the power of the impacts, and a few vehicles were toppled and folded in the midst of the rubble.