A Syrian government airstrike killed at least 10 children in a playground on Sunday in the town of Deir al-Asafir in the outskirts of Damascus, according to The Atlantic Wire.

Sources told Reuters and CNN that planes flown by Assad loyalists released cluster bombs in the town, one of which landed on a playground full of children. An aftermath video on Youtube showed a street "littered with children's bloody bodies," the report added, with several bodies found in a nearby car and one woman shown crying over a dead child dressed all in purple.

The video is graphic and disturbing.

Locals told reporters that the bombing came without provocation, since there was no fighting in Deir al-Asafir prior to the attack, and one area resident said it was an "indiscriminate bombing." The danger continues with a large number of unexploded bombs lying around Deir al-Asafir, according to The Inquisitr.

Several media outlets in Syria explained that the country's government spoke of interest in "cleansing" some areas of possible terrorists, according to the Wire. However, Syrian authorities have not commented on the attack at time of publication and American journalists have been not been allowed in the country for months. Nine journalists who gained access into the country were killed.

Earlier in November, Syrian opposition groups signed an agreement uniting nearly all rebel groups for the first time, a greater number even than those that make up the Syrian National Council. The new group is known as National Coalition of Syrian Revolutionary and Opposition Forces.

"Today in Doha is the first time the different factions of the Syrian opposition are united in one body," said Riyad Farid Hijab, a former prime minister of Syria. "So we ask the international community to recognize the Syrian opposition as the representative of the Syrians."