At least seven people were killed in a car bomb attack that targeted a busy market in northern Syria, the BBC reports.
Several other people were injured in the attack in the town of Azaz in Aleppo province, near the Turkish border.
Reuters reports that 30 were injured.
Beta Agency reports that local officials said that five were wounded.
On the other hand, the UK-based opposition organization Syrian Observatory for Human Rights announced that eight people were killed in the attack, while 23 were wounded.
It is unclear who carried out the attack in the city, which is controlled by pro-Turkish militias fighting Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.
Turkish forces and their proxies control large areas of Syria along the border shared by the two countries.
When the bomb went off, the market was full of people buying children's clothes ahead of Eid al-Fitr, which marks the end of the Islamic fasting month of Ramadan next month, according to the BBC.
The White Helmets, a volunteer rescue group operating in Syria, said two children were among the dead.
The footage shows bodies lying on the ground, damaged buildings and burning remains of cars.
No group claimed responsibility for the attack.
Azaz is home to the Syrian Transitional Government, an opposition group that claims to be the country's legitimate government.
Analysts have described the city as strategically important in the context of the civil war due to its proximity to the Turkish border and its value as a supply route.
Bombs targeting crowded civilian areas are not uncommon in Syria's northwestern border region, including Azaz.
In 2017, more than 40 people were killed when a car bomb detonated outside the city's courthouse.
The Islamic State group - which seized the city in 2013 and briefly held it - said it carried out the attack.
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