Arab Times

Syrian army advances into Hama town

Russian marine major killed in combat

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AMMAN, April 20, (Agencies): The Syrian army advanced into the town of Taybet al Imam in Hama province on Thursday, expanding its territory along the strategic western highway between Damascus and Aleppo, the army and rebels said.

The government forces were backed by heavy Russian aerial strikes across a large swathe of territory to the west of the M5 highway held by rebels in their six-year civil war, they said.

The rebels said the army was also joined by Iranian-backed militias in the push into Taybet al Imam, which was seized by rebels last year from forces loyal to President Bashar al-Assad.

Dozens of aerial strikes also hit the nearby towns of Halfaya and Latamneh, which rebels had seized only last month. Their alliance of jihadists alongside moderate Free Syrian Army (FSA) groups have been trying to defend them in recent days.

Sources gave slightly different versions of the current state of the conflict in Taybet al Imam, which lies 18 km (11 miles) north of Hama city.

The British-based Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights said the army had now taken the town, after a ground assault this morning that caused losses on both sides after days of heavy bombing.

A rebel source confirmed the army had taken over the western outskirts of Taybet al Imam and said rebels were retreating from parts of the town to cut losses from the heavy aerial bombing.

State media, quoting army sources, said the army was making significan­t progress in its campaign to take over the town but gave no details.

The media unit of Lebanon’s Hezbollah Shi’ite militia said the town had fallen to loyalist forces. It said pro-government militias had pounded rebel outposts with artillery gunfire and rockets.

A rebel commander said Russian jets had escalated their bombing campaign in the area in the past few days, deploying a “scorched earth” strategy using incendiary and phosphorou­s bombs on civilian areas that had left scores of injured and dead.

“Russian jets are bombing us every second and leaving whole towns in Hama countrysid­e in ruins and totally destroyed. Only after this are regime troops able to make any advance,” said Abu Saleh from the Jaish al Izza rebel group.

Thousands of families had fled the fighting in the last few days, he added.

The army’s capture earlier this week of Soran, a town just east of the highway, meant government forces had now regained most of the territory that rebels had seized in their major offensive last month in Hama province.

Soran is the army’s northern gateway to the city of Hama, the provincial capital, and opposition control of it threatened the city.

The army has its eyes now set on the town of Morek, the next town after Soran going north on the highway crucial to control of western Syria.

A major in Russia’s marines has been killed in combat in Syria, a former marine who served with him and a person close to the Russian Black Sea Fleet told Reuters on Thursday.

Russian forces are backing Syrian President Bashar al-Assad in his war with rebels and militants seeking to oust him. The Russian Defence Ministry has reported that about 30 Russian servicemen have been killed in Syria since the start of the Kremlin’s operation there in September 2015.

According to evidence collected by Reuters, losses among Russian servicemen and private military contractor­s in Syria are higher, though the defence ministry has denied understati­ng the death toll.

Two sources said the latest Russian serviceman to be killed there was Major Sergei Bordov.

“They were caught in shell fire. Two of our Russian servicemen and two Syrian soldiers died,” Vyacheslav Pavlyuchen­ko, who served with Bordov, told Reuters.

He said the shelling incident had happened on Tuesday and that he did not know the names of the other fatalities.

Bordov is one of the most high ranking Russian officers to be killed in Syria. He was in command of a reconnaiss­ance company two years ago, Pavlyuchen­ko said. He said he was not aware of Bordov’s current role in the Syria operation.

The Russian defence ministry did not immediatel­y reply to a request for comment.

Bordov’s body is expected to be delivered to his military unit in the Crimean town of Sevastopol on Friday and he is expected to be buried in his hometown of Simferopol on Saturday, Pavlyuchen­ko and the person close to the fleet said.

Elsewhere, the global chemical arms watchdog Thursday “overwhelmi­ngly” rejected a RussianIra­nian move to launch a new investigat­ion into a suspected chemical attack in Syria, delegates said, backing the probe already underway.

“The #OPCW executive council has overwhelmi­ngly rejected the Russian and Iranian decision,” the British delegation to the watchdog said in a Tweet.

A draft decision put forward by Moscow and Tehran — and obtained by AFP — had called for a new investigat­ion by the Organisati­on for the Prohibitio­n of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) “to establish whether chemical weapons were used in Khan Sheikhun and how they were delivered to the site of the reported incident”.

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