Toronto Star

Aleppo targeted in attacks by militants, rebels

New coalition Ansar al-Sharia renews heavy fighting in Syrian government-held city

- BASSEM MROUE THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

BEIRUT— Islamic militants and rebels in Syria launched fresh attacks on government-held neighbourh­oods in Aleppo on Friday, setting off some of the heaviest fighting in months in the contested northern city, activists and state media said.

The fighting is part of a new coordinate­d offensive in Aleppo by a newly formed coalition comprising Al Qaeda’s branch in Syria, the Nusra Front, and the ultra-conservati­ve Ahrar al-Sham group, as well as other rebels.

The groups said they seek to “liberate” Aleppo under their coalition, Ansar al-Sharia.

A former industrial and commercial hub, Aleppo has been carved up between government- and rebelheld neighbourh­oods since 2012. With the city devastated by three years of fighting, many of its residents have long fled.

The Britain-based Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights said the attacks started early Thursday with concentrat­ed rocket attacks targeting the government-held Zahra neighbourh­ood in western Aleppo, where some of the Syrian army’s key military installati­ons are located.

The government struck back with a series of airstrikes and shelling that killed at least 35 militants, according to the Observator­y. There was no casualty figure for government troops.

State TV said troops repelled the attacks, airing a live report from the city to show the situation was under control.

The formation of Ansar al-Sharia and its push in Aleppo come amid a string of battlefiel­d losses for President Bashar Assad’s overstretc­hed forces in the north and south.

Near the capital, Damascus, a bomb exploded inside a mosque in the opposition-held Tal area on Friday, killing a Sunni Muslim cleric, Syria’s state TV reported.

The TV said the bomb was placed under the pulpit, or minbar, at the Grand Mosque and went off shortly after the midday prayers ended. The report said Sheikh Suleiman Afandi was instantly killed.

It was not immediatel­y clear who was behind the killing. Tal has witnessed reconcilia­tion between the government and rebels, but is mostly opposition-controlled.

Bombings targeting mosques have not been uncommon during Syria’s civil war.

In 2013, Sunni Muslim preacher Sheik Mohammad Said Ramadan al-Buti, an outspoken supporter of Assad, was killed along with at least 41 others when a suicide bomber struck a Damascus mosque.

Also Friday, near the Lebanese border, Syrian troops and pro-government fighters tried to storm the mountain resort of Zabadani under the cover of intense airstrikes, the Observator­y said.

The local co-ordination committees said rebels are defending Zabadani, adding that three local fighters were killed there on Friday.

Syria’s civil war, now in its fifth year, has killed more than 220,000 people and wounded at least a million, according to the United Nations.

 ?? LOUAI BESHARA/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Damascus has seen a number of army recruitmen­t billboards since the Syrian army has become overstretc­hed.
LOUAI BESHARA/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Damascus has seen a number of army recruitmen­t billboards since the Syrian army has become overstretc­hed.

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