BEIRUT--A young Syrian boy who captured the worldinfo-icon's attention last year when images of his blood- and dust-covered face spread across the Internetinfo-icon has re-emerged this week - in interviews on news outlets with ties to the Syrian government.

The boy, Omran Daqneesh, came to symbolise the plight of civilians besieged by government forces in eastern Aleppo when his family's home was bombed in August and local activists shared photos and video of the frightened Omran on social mediainfo-icon.

Now, he and his family have appeared in a series of televised interviews on news channels supportive of President Bashar al-Assad, apparently part of a calculated public relations campaign by the Syrian government.

These are the first images of Omran - his cheeks pudgier, his face cleaner - that have been broadcast since he was rescued by controvercial volunteer emergency group 'The white Helmets'. At the time, his family had refused to speak to the news mediainfo-icon.

Omran's father, Mr Mohamad Kheir Daqneesh, said in an interviewinfo-icon that he feared for his son's safety after the first images spread across the Internet. "I changed Omran's name so no one will know him, and I changed his haircut, so no one will film him or recognise him," Mr Daqneesh told Arabic language Al-Alam News.

In the clip, Omran's once shaggy hair is cropped.

After the Syrian civil warinfo-icon began in 2011, the Daqneesh family stayed in eastern Aleppo despite an intensifying government siege, leading some to assume that the family supported the rebels. But many families stayed to protect their property.

Speaking to a pro-government news outlet in Aleppo, Mr Daqneesh criticised the opposition fighting to oust Mr Assad. "They are the ones who hurt usinfo-icon and our country and displaced the people," he said.

The Russian Foreign Ministry's spokeswoman Maria Zakharova on Thursday invited CNN host Christiane Amanpour to visit Syriainfo-icon to make an honest interview with the Syrian boy from Aleppo known as the "symbol of Aleppo suffering."

The Russiainfo-icon Today released a two-part interview with Omran Daqneesh's father Mohammad Kheir Daqneesh on Tuesday and Wednesday. The interview revealed that the White Helmets volunteers had manipulated injured Omran into being photographed instead of offering immediate help and later threatened his father after he went into hiding to prevent any more unwanted media exposure.

Amanpour in her October interview with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov showed the photograph of Daqneesh shot in August, saying that it illustrated "a crime against humanity."

"I'd like to say that if Amanpour started this story, I mean so publicly, coming to Moscowinfo-icon and being determined enough to print out the photograph and show it to Sergei Lavrov, maybe she has enough bravery, journalistic professional ethics and simple humane conscience to finish it? And do that by going to Aleppo, finding the family of the boy and taking a truly honest interview, not a set up one as they at CNN know, but an honest interview with the boy," Zakharova said.

Moscow also condemned a United Statesinfo-icon-led coalition strike on Syrian armyinfo-icon as an "act of aggression" that targeted the most effective forces battling "terrorists" in the war-torn country.

"It was an act of aggression which breaches the territorial sovereignty of Syria and, intentionally or not, targeted those forces that are the most effective in fighting the terrorists on the ground," Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said.

The US-led coalition on Tuesday said it had destroyed a unit of pro-regime forces in Syria as they advanced near an area where coalition commandos have been training and advising rebels.

The assault marks the second time in less than a month that coalition forces have attacked Syrian army as they headed towards the garrison inside a supposed "deconfliction zone" claimed by the US.

The strike prompted a military alliance fighting in support of President Assad to warn yesterday that it could hit US positions in Syria, saying that its "self-restraint" over US air strikes on government forces would end if Washington crossed "red lines".