Syria Army Seizes New Rebel District in Aleppo

W460

Syria army retakes over half of rebel east Aleppo

Aleppo, Syria | AFP | Saturday 12/3/2016 - 12:31 UTC+2 | 758 words

by Karam al-Masri

Syria's army advanced overnight deeper into east Aleppo where it now controls more than half of the former rebel stronghold after a fierce assault that has sparked an international outcry.

Tens of thousands of civilians have fled eastern neighbourhoods of the battered city since President Bashar al-Assad's regime began its latest offensive in mid-November.

Overnight, government troops and allied forces seized the district of Tariq al-Bab where heavy fighting had raged a day earlier, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said Saturday.

The government has now recaptured around 60 percent of eastern parts of the city that the rebels overran in mid-2012, according to the Britain-based monitor.

The advance opens the road leading from the government-controlled west of the city to the international airport just outside Aleppo to the east, which is also held by the regime.

And it has prompted more civilians to flee, heading either further south into remaining rebel-held districts or crossing into government-held territory or areas under Kurdish control.

Assad's forces have made swift gains in east Aleppo, and its loss would be the biggest blow yet to Syria's opposition in the more than five-year-old war.

More than 300,000 people have been killed since the conflict started with anti-government protests in March 2011, and over half the country's population has been displaced.

- 'Over 300 killed' -The government has trumpeted its advances, and state television on Saturday showed buses full of residents going from west Aleppo back to their homes in neighbourhoods retaken by the army.

More than 300 civilians have been killed in the government's assault on east Aleppo since November 15, according to the Observatory.

The monitor says nearly 65 civilians have been killed in the same period by rebel fire on government-held west Aleppo, including nine on Friday.

Rebels have struggled to hold back government ground forces, who have advanced backed by air strikes, barrel bombs and artillery fire.

On Friday, they rolled back some regime gains in the Sheikh Saeed district on Aleppo's southeastern outskirts, but it was unclear how long they could hold that line.

Sheikh Saeed borders the last remaining parts of Aleppo still in rebel hands -- a collection of densely populated residential neighbourhoods where thousands have sought refuge from advancing regime forces.

In preparation for street-by-street fighting in these districts, hundreds of fighters from Syria's elite Republican Guard and Fourth Division arrived in Aleppo Friday, the Observatory said.

The fighting has prompted more than 50,000 people to leave east Aleppo for territory controlled by either the government or Kurdish forces.

On Friday, as the army advanced in Tariq al-Bab, an AFP correspondent said residents had emptied out of neighbouring Shaar district, anticipating the arrival of fighting there.

He said just a few rebels could be seen in the district, manning positions in front of shuttered shops and bakeries.

Vegetable stalls that had been selling the most meagre of supplies after more than four months of government siege were lying shattered in one street by artillery fire.

On Saturday, the Observatory said three people were killed and at least 10 others wounded in air strikes on Shaar, and that raids were targeting several other eastern neighbourhoods in the city.

The escalating violence has been met with international outrage, including a UN warning that east Aleppo could become "a giant graveyard".

- 'Race again time' -Moscow, a staunch ally of the regime, has proposed setting up four humanitarian corridors into east Aleppo. 

"We have informed the UN in New York and Geneva that there is no longer a problem with the delivery of humanitarian cargo to eastern Aleppo," Russia's Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said Friday.

He said the UN was coming up with a plan and approval from Syrian authorities remained essential.

Moscow has announced several humanitarian pauses in Aleppo to allow civilians to flee, but until the recent escalation, only a handful did so.

Many civilians in the east previously expressed fear of leaving to government-held areas or through passages run by Moscow, which began a bombing campaign in support of Assad's forces in 2015.

But Damascus and Moscow accuse rebels of holding civilians hostage and using them as "human shields."

Of those who have fled in the east in recent days, nearly 20,000 are children, according to estimates by the UN's children's agency UNICEF.

"What is critical now is that we provide the immediate and sustained assistance that these children and their families desperately need," UNICEF spokesman Christophe Boulierac said.

"It's a race against time, as winter is here and conditions are basic."

Comments 13
Default-user-icon Go figure (Guest) 03 December 2016, 13:13

The Syrian army keeps attacking everyone except IS while IS keeps attacking everyone except Iran.

Thumb Mystic 03 December 2016, 13:21

The stranglehold on the moderate al qaeda Salafis are getting tighter.

Thumb _mowaten_ 03 December 2016, 14:44

but but but they were going to break the siege last month? nooooo? hahahah

Thumb Mystic 03 December 2016, 14:54

Yes they promised alot of things those takfiris, they also promised Assad would be overthrown 6 years ago.
How well did it all turn out for them? They can not stop this storm, they must realize that they are fighting for nothing but misery at this point.
They had their chance to turn Syria into a Wahabi caliphate and they failed.

Assad has now proven that he could follow his fathers footsteps and crush any foreign conspiracy against him, this will make the Western world and the GCC/Turkey to reconsider carefully next time they want to make a mess in Syria.

Thumb Mystic 03 December 2016, 14:58

This does not make it a victory just yet, the salafis will be stubborn and keep fighting.
They still do not wish to believe that they are losing this war, so we should not underestimate their desperate attempts to recapture territory.

The salafi rebels can still bite back, The Resistance just have to pull out the salafi takfiris teeths,, One by One.

Thumb _mowaten_ 03 December 2016, 16:02

stop harassing the readership terro

Thumb justice 03 December 2016, 16:24

you and your filthy aliases are considered trollership and not readership.

Thumb Puppet 03 December 2016, 16:31

I respect Mr. Mystic and Mr. Mowaten's dental surgery techniques when it comes to eradicating terrorism.

Thumb galaxy 04 December 2016, 09:27

Did Russia intervene in the Syrian war with its air force, ground forces, and naval forces because your militia was winning the war or was it because it was having its rotten teeth pulled out one by one without anesthesia. :)

Thumb ex-fpm 04 December 2016, 16:52

lol @galaxy

Default-user-icon Mouwaten (Guest) 03 December 2016, 14:56

You sound like the Zionist media when talking about the resistance, you learn well hahahaha

Thumb liberty 04 December 2016, 03:14

bigjohn; the Soviet Union is no more; the Berlin wall came down and the Iron Curtain has been ironed. Wake up dude man has landed on the moon.

Thumb galaxy 04 December 2016, 09:29

hehe the troll has the same tune and he sings it on every article.:)