Arab News

Syrian regime forces ‘foil drone attack’ on army base in northwest

Idlib region saw a lull in air raids after Russia announced unilateral cease-fire on Aug. 30

- Reuters, AFP Beirut

The Syrian regime forces claimed on Saturday its air defenses foiled a drone attack by “terrorist” groups on a main military base in northweste­rn Syria, where a Russian-brokered cease-fire has stopped months of fighting.

The three drones, which were carrying explosives, were shot down on Friday and destroyed without causing any losses, the army said in a statement reported on Syrian state media.

The Idlib region saw a lull in air raids that have been pounding opposition-held territory after Russia’s Defense Ministry announced on Aug. 30 that Syrian forces would unilateral­ly cease fire in an “de-escalation zone” brokered two year ago.

The Russian Defense Ministry, which urged insurgent factions to join the truce, has long said along with its ally they were targeting Al-Qaeda-inspired militants and responding to attacks.

Moscow’s deployment of more special forces before the cease-fire succeeded in shrinking opposition-held territory after months of stalemate on the frontlines, where opposition fighters had earlier been holding back the army from major advances, Western intelligen­ce sources said.

The opposition says although

UNTENABLE TRUCE

the heavy airstrikes by Russian and Syrian jets have stopped since the cease-fire, heavy shelling on opposition-held villages and towns continue to force thousands of civilians to leave to the safety of areas closer to the Turkish border.

They also say Russian special forces and Iranian-backed militias fighting alongside the Syrian army have breached the cease-fire by launching several major attempts to storm opposition-held areas in recent days that have so far been repelled.

Anti-regime protests

A day earlier, hundreds of Syrians held anti-regime protests in opposition-held Idlib province. Some demonstrat­ors gathered near the Bab Al-Hawa border crossing with Turkey, where Turkish border guards last week fired warning shots and tear gas to disperse Syrian protesters. They waved the three-star flag of the eight-year-old uprising and chanted against Bashar Assad’s regime, while some called on opposition backer Turkey to open its borders. “We only want the Turkish government to open its borders for our brothers who live under the olive trees,” protester Abu Haytham told AFP, referring to displaced Syrians living in the open air. Airstrikes have stopped since the agreement went into effect last Saturday morning, but sporadic artillery fire has continued. Russiaback­ed regime forces have been pressing an offensive against Idlib since the end of April.

More than 960 civilians have been killed in four months of heavy bombardmen­t, according to the Britain-based Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights. More than 400,000 people have been displaced. Last week, an Assad adviser said the Idlib cease-fire was “temporary.”

 ?? AFP ?? An opposition fighter belonging to National Liberation Front in southwest
Idlib province as the Russian Defense Ministry urges insurgent factions to join the cease-fire.
AFP An opposition fighter belonging to National Liberation Front in southwest Idlib province as the Russian Defense Ministry urges insurgent factions to join the cease-fire.

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