Austin American-Statesman

Syrian warplanes pound rebel-held area in central city

- By Bassem Mroue

Government warplanes pounded a rebel-held neighborho­od in the central city of Homs on Sunday, kill- ing at least three and wound- ing dozens, Syrian opposition activists said, and Pres- ident Bashar Assad’s forces pushed ahead in Syria’s offen- sive on the historic town of Palmyra held by the Islamic State group.

The Britain-based Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights and pro-government media said troops were about 6 miles west of Palmyra, which is home to some of the world’s most treasured archaeolog­ical sites.

IS overran the city, prized for its ancient Roman archae- ological ruins, for a second time in December. In March last year, government forces had captured the town end

ing a 10-month occupation. The Observator­y said government forces and their allies now control hills that oversee three gas fields west

of the town amid intense air- strikes. Syrian troops and their allies launched a wide

offensive toward Palmyra in mid-January under the cover of Russian airstrikes. The gover nmen t-controlled Syrian Central Mil- itary Media confirmed that troops are now a few miles

away from the town, which has already suffered massive destructio­n at the hands of IS.

SCMM said Syrian troops captured the town of Tadef

from IS on the southern edge of al-Bab, adding that experts were dismantlin­g explosives and booby traps left behind by the extremists.

Meanwhile on Sunday, the United Nations envoy

for Syria met with opposi- tion representa­tives sepa- rately in Geneva reflecting the groups’ struggle to form a united front in peace talks with the Damascus government. Staffan de Mistura met first with representa­tives of the opposition delegation dubbed the Cairo platform.

After the meeting, Jihad Makdissi, at the helm of the Cairo delegation­s, said the envoy gave them papers on “how to facilitate talks” between the various opposition groups and the government.

Makdissi, a former spokesman for the Damascus government who left Syria in 2012, sought to downplay difference­s in the opposition, saying they were “diverse” rather than “fragmented,” and could agree on technical rather than political points.

“We want to be one delegation, not a unified delegation,” he told reporters.

Opposition activists said airstrikes on Homs’ rebel-held neighborho­od of al-Waer on Sunday came a day after the area was subjected to more than 40 air raids that killed and wounded dozens.

The airstrikes appeared to be in retaliatio­n for militant attacks in the city Saturday that killed a senior security officer and at least 31 others.

The Observator­y and the al-Waer-based activist Bebars al-Talawy said the airstrikes killed three people. “Today’s escalation began in the early afternoon with repeated airstrikes,” al-Talawy said via text messages from al-Waer.

The Observator­y said that al-Waer was also being subjected to shelling.

The swift, high-profile attacks against the Military Intelligen­ce and State Security offices were claimed by an al-Qaida-linked insurgent coalition known as the Levant Liberation Committee.

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