China Daily

Syrian Army making headway

Govt forces take towns in Eastern Ghouta as civilians flee, seek shelter

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DAMASCUS — The Syrian Army advanced on Saturday in the rebel-held Eastern Ghouta countrysid­e of the capital Damascus, capturing a number of areas.

A military source said government forces took the towns of Otaya, Nashabiyeh and Herzama following battles with the rebels.

The London-based Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights watchdog said clashes between Syrian forces and an array of rebel groups have been ongoing in the eastern and southeaste­rn parts of Eastern Ghouta, which, it said, is besieged by the Syrian army.

It said that the rebel-held region has been under an intense government offensive since Feb 25, and 65 Syrian soldiers have been killed in the area in the last week.

The watchdog and a local resident said on Sunday that hundreds of people are fleeing the fighting and seeking shelter in areas closer to the center of Eastern Ghouta.

The region has grabbed internatio­nal attention since the military showdown started to gain momentum on Feb 18.

The United Nations Security Council adopted Resolution 2401 on Feb 24, which requires all parties in Syria to immediatel­y cease clashes and provides a sustained humanitari­an break for at least 30 days across Syria.

Two days later, the Russians demanded a daily humanitari­an pause for five hours in Eastern Ghouta specifical­ly.

Those initiative­s have slightly reduced rebels mortar shelling on the capital and the Syrian airstrikes and bombardmen­t of Eastern Ghouta.

During the five-hour-long truce, the situation becomes calm, but the military confrontat­ion continues almost immediatel­y afterward.

Five days into the humanitari­an pause, only two children left Eastern Ghouta as well as a Pakistani couple through the designated humanitari­an corridor in Wafidin area, adjacent to the city of Douma, which is under the control of the Islam Army rebels.

The Islam Army said the civilians evacuation from Eastern Ghouta wasn’t part of the recent UN Security Council resolution, urging instead for the entry of relief aid to the area.

‘Urgent debate’

But the Russian-backed Syrian army is apparently determined to recapture the enclave, which constitute­s the last remaining threat to the capital after the Syrian forces captured all the surroundin­gs of the capital except Eastern Ghouta.

The United Kingdom formally asking the UN Human Rights Council to hold an “urgent debate” this week on the situation in the area.

Voting on the resolution was postponed until Monday after member states failed to agree on the final text.

Meanwhile, Turkish air strikes killed at least 36 progovernm­ent fighters backing Kurdish militia in Syria’s northweste­rn Kurdish enclave of Afrin on Saturday, a monitoring group said.

The Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces alliance said the Turkish raids targeted pro-government positions, but gave no death toll.

The Observator­y for Human Rights said the strikes on Kafr Janna were the third such raid on loyalist fighters in the enclave bordering Turkey in less than 48 hours.

They came after Turkish raids on other parts of the enclave killed 14 pro-regime fighters on Thursday and four more on Friday, the monitor said.

Turkish-led Syrian opposition fighters have advanced since Jan 20, when they launched an assault on Afrin, controlled by the Kurdish People’s Protection Units, or YPG.

The Syrian government deployed fighters to the enclave a month later after the Kurds appealed for help.

Ankara says the YPG is a “terrorist” extension of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party, which has waged a three-decade insurgency against the Turkish state.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A Turkish-backed Free Syrian Army fighter fires a projectile during fighting around Afrin, Syria, on Saturday.
REUTERS A Turkish-backed Free Syrian Army fighter fires a projectile during fighting around Afrin, Syria, on Saturday.

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