Syria Army Makes 'Major Advance' in Christian Town

إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربية W460

Syrian government troops on Wednesday beat back Islamist rebels and advanced into Maalula, a historic Christian town near Damascus, state news agency SANA reported.

"Units from our heroic army have made major advances, chasing down terrorists from Al-Nusra Front in the town of Maalula," said an official cited by SANA.

The army "has made it across the town's main square and has reached the Mar Takla convent," said the source, adding that "dozens of terrorists have been wiped out".

The regime has used the word "terrorist" to its opponents ever since the start of an uprising against President Bashar Assad's rule in March 2011.

The official also said eight rebels had been killed and 20 others wounded in fighting north of Maalula.

A security source earlier told Agence France Presse that "the army has not yet retaken Maalula" and that fighting between rebels against troops was "raging on".

The army's advance comes a day after rebels announced they would withdraw from Maalula, but that this was "conditional" on pro-regime forces not taking their place.

"The army and its shabiha (militias) must not enter into the town," a spokesman for the rebels said in an online video statement.

"To ensure no blood is spilt and that the properties of the people of Maalula are kept safe, the Free Syrian Army announces that the town of Maalula will be kept out of the struggle between the FSA and the regime army," he said.

On Sunday, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights and residents said rebel forces, including jihadists linked to al-Qaida, had overrun Maalula.

A nun from Mar Takla convent in Maalula told AFP by telephone that "there were fierce battles (on Tuesday) but the town was not shelled. We and the orphans we take care of are doing well, but we lack fuel".

The town, home to about 5,000 people, is strategically important for rebels, trying to tighten their grip around Damascus and who already have bases circling the capital.

Civilians started fleeing the town nearly a week ago, fearing an imminent escalation.

The National Coordination Body, an opposition group tolerated by the regime, said most fled to the neighboring Sunni village of Ain al-Tine, as well as to Damascus.

The opposition National Coalition charged that regime artillery shelled Maalula after they lost control, "indifferent to the holy sites within it."

Amateur video distributed by activists showed damage to the facade of a convent and the unidentified cameraman said the regime used "tank and rocket fire" to target it.

Picturesque Maalula, nestled under a large cliff, is considered a symbol of the ancient Christian presence in Syria.

Its people are among the few in the world who speak Aramaic, the language of Jesus Christ.

Comments 3
Thumb Roaring-FlameThrower 11 September 2013, 12:00

LOL @ rebels:) God Bless the Syrian Arab Army and President Assssad for protecting minorities specifically us the Christians in the East, and for foiling Sarkozy's plot to ethnically cleanse us and ship us to Europe, the continent that was! We want to live here, among other minorities such as the Alwaites. We want to enjoy the real democracy of the Baath party and the jihadist ideology of the Islamic Iranian Resistance. The Baath regime and the Islamic Iranian Resistance are keen on protecting minorities. A few of you might ask, why does not the regime also protect the Syrian majority; to those I say this false majority is hell bent on terrorism and undermining democracy. Assad is a doctor not a butcher. He amputates a patient's leg to save the patient's life. God Bless him.......

Thumb _mowaten_ 11 September 2013, 12:32

another great achievement of the mighty rebels, thanks go to the west for their indefectible support and promotion of democracy and prevention of vice.

http://gerarddirect.com/2013/01/03/6874/

Missing putin1 11 September 2013, 12:44

Christians faced since Kissinger's plan to eliminate them from ME in 1973, a massacre. No one is talking about in main stream media because Israeli-Saudi will never pay for that. Assad, the father, foiled that attempt in Lebanon civil war. Iraq and Egypt went as planned. Now Syria: Big question for Assad the son?