The death toll from an attack blamed on the Daesh group in Syria has risen to 68, a war monitor said on Saturday, the deadliest attack in over a year.
"A total of 61 civilians and seven soldiers have been killed in the attack," said Rami Abdel Rahman, who heads the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.
The Britain-based Observatory, which has a wide network of sources inside Syria, said the attack had been carried out on Friday by militants on motorcycles who opened fire on truffle hunters.
The monitor said that Daesh was taking advantage of the annual harvest of the desert fungus delicacy, which generally runs from February to April, to carry out attacks in remote locations.
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The attack takes the total number murdered in suspected Daesh attacks in the Syrian desert to 90 since February 10, with a string of other killings in recent days, the monitor said.
Daesh group did not immediately claim the attack on its usual channels.
Syrian state media had reported 53 deaths on Friday, after the attack southwest of the town of Al-Sokhna, in the desert east of Homs.
It was the deadliest attack by Daesh since January last year, when they stormed a prison in the Kurdish-controlled northeastern city of Hasakeh in a bid to free fellow militants.
The resulting fighting inside the city killed 105 people, mostly civilians, as well as 268 militants.
After the militants lost their last scraps of territory following a military onslaught backed by a US-led coalition in March 2019, IS remnants in Syria mostly retreated to hideouts in the desert.
They have since used such hideouts to ambush Kurdish-led forces and Syrian government troops, while continuing to mount attacks in neighbouring Iraq.
Agence France-Presse