- Select a language for the TTS:
- UK English Female
- UK English Male
- US English Female
- US English Male
- Australian Female
- Australian Male
- Language selected: (auto detect) - EN
Play all audios:
The clash took place in the Antalya Province of southern Turkey – close to the country’s Mediterranean coast. A red car was filmed pulling over on the side of a road, unaware it had stopped
metres away from a TV news crew. Belongings started to be thrown out of the passenger-side door by the woman. As the man, who had been driving the car, got out and walked towards the other
side of the car his wife leapt out and tried to strike him with a teapot. The man grabbed hold of her wrist and twisted it behind her back, taking the teapot from her, as his wife shouted in
pain. She then opened the back door and pulled her seven-year-old son from the car before her husband punched her on the head. The wife then sat down on the kerb crying while the man put
everything back in the car while gesturing angrily at the TV crew as he realised his sickening attack had been filmed. His wife then walked off on foot as the man put his son in the front
passenger seat before following her in the car. When he caught up with her, he shouted to her to get back in the car and she did, telling her son to get in the back. The family finally set
off on their journey – only to be stopped by a police officer who had seen their row. The woman reportedly told the policeman she was upset because her father had died. Their car was
registered in the city of Gaziantep just north of Turkey's border with Syria. It lies 50 miles north of Aleppo, the Syrian city worst hit by the civil war. UN officials have called for
immediate and urgent action to help save those still trapped in Aleppo, Syria’s largest city. As many as 275,000 people are in desperate need of food, water and aid after Syrian forces
loyal to Bashar al-Assad, and supported by Russian air power, laid siege to the city. Stephen O'Brien, the UN's top aid official, told the Security Council: "I'm not
going to pretend. I'm angry, very angry. "As the UN's humanitarian chief, this callous carnage that is Syria has long since moved from the cynical to the sinful."