Syrian forces loyal to
President Bashar al-Assad seized a strategic town east of Damascus on
Wednesday, breaking a critical weapons supply route for the rebels, activists
and fighters said.
Rebels have held
several suburbs ringing the southern and eastern parts Damascus for months, but
they have been struggling to maintain their positions against a ground
offensive backed by fierce army shelling and air strikes in recent weeks.
“The disaster has
struck, the army entered Otaiba. The regime has managed to turn off the weapons
tap,” a fighter from the town told Reuters via Skype. “The price of a bullet
will go from 50 Syrian pounds to 1,000 Syrian pounds [$10] now, but we must pay
and retake it. It's the main if not the only route.”
Rebels said they pulled
out of Otaiba, a gateway to the eastern rural suburbs of Damascus known as
al-Ghouta, in the early hours after more than 37 days of fighting in which they
accused the government of using chemical weapons against them twice.
The government has
denied using chemical weapons and accused rebels in turn of firing them in Aleppo.
Rebels used Otaiba for
eight months as their main supply route to Damascus for weapons brought in from
the Jordanian border, where Saudi Arabia and other private donors are believed
to be sending in arms.
Government forces
pushed in with tanks and soldiers.
“Now all the villages
will start falling one after another, the battle in Eastern Ghouta will be a
war of attrition,” another fighter in the area said, speaking by Skype.
More than two years
into their struggle to end four decades of Assad family rule, the rebels remain
divided by struggles over ideology and fighting for power.
Rebels fighting in
Otaiba said they sent a distress call to brigades in other parts of Ghouta but
it went unanswered by other units with whom they compete for influence and
weapons.
“To all mujahedeen
[holy warriors]: If Otaiba falls, the whole of Eastern Ghouta will fall ...
come and help,” part of the message sent to fighters said.
The army appears to
have been advancing on fronts across Syria in recent weeks, even in northern
provinces where rebels seized large swathes of territory.
Minaret
collapses
Most critically, it has
made gains around Damascus and the Lebanese-Syrian border - critical to linking
the capital to coastal provinces that are Assad's stronghold.
The coast is an enclave
of Assad's minority Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shi'ite Islam. Alawites have
dominated Syria's power structures during four decades of Assad family rule.
Rebels, mostly from the
Sunni Muslim majority, have seized territory in northern and southern Syria,
and hold about half of Aleppo, the country's biggest city. But Assad's forces
have kept control of the capital Damascus and most major cities.
Elsewhere in Damascus,
two mortar bombs hit the government-held suburb of Jaramana, killing seven and
wounding more than 25, activists and state media said. State news agency SANA
blamed the attack on “terrorists”, the term it commonly uses to describe
Assad's armed opponents.
Some rebel units
condemned the attack on Jaramana.
“Our brigade loudly
condemns these criminal acts, which have nothing to do with Islam in any way,”
the Saad bin Abada al-Khudraji brigade said.
Islamist rebel units
said on Wednesday they had launched an offensive on the coastal province of
Latakia, a move which could further stoke sectarian tensions in a war that has
increasingly divided the country along religious and ethnic lines.
Islamist fighters said
they had fired two rockets that hit the town of Qurdaha, the birthplace and
burial site of Assad's father, Hafez al-Assad, who ruled Syria for 30 years.
Residents in Latakia province who spoke to Reuters by Skype said the rockets
hit outside Qurdaha, in a rural area called Slunfeh.
It is impossible to
verify the account due to government restrictions on media access in Syria.
Moscow was flying more
Russians home after delivering humanitarian aid to Latakia, the Emergencies
Ministry said. It was one of several government flights laid on in the past
months by Russia, a long-standing arms supplier to Damascus.
The conflict has cost more than 70,000 lives
and has also damaged or destroyed many archaeological and architectural
treasures, some of them U.N. world heritage sites, such as Aleppo's Old City
where the mosque is located.
The 1,000-year-old
minaret of Aleppo's Umayyad Mosque has collapsed due to clashes between Syrian
rebels and Assad's forces, activists and state media said on Wednesday.
The opposing parties
blamed the other for the toppling of the minaret, which predated the
medieval-era mosque it stood in. Fighting has ravaged the Old City's
stone-vaulted alleyways for months and had already reduced much of the mosque
to rubble.
SANA accused the Nusra
Front, an al-Qaida-linked rebel group, of bringing down the minaret. Opposition
groups said army tank fire was to blame.
Sources :
http://www.voanews.com/content/fighting-in-syria-lays-siege-to-historic-mosque/1648130.html
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