Kuwait Times

Syria regime forces set to enter key rebel hub

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NEAR MAARET AL-NUMAN: Syrian regime forces were poised yesterday to soon enter Maaret al-Numan, a town of symbolic and strategic importance that is deserted after months of bombardmen­t, in the country’s last major opposition bastion. Maaret Al-Numan is a strategic prize lying on the M5 highway linking Damascus to Syria’s second city Aleppo, a main artery coveted by the regime.

It is also the second biggest city in the beleaguere­d northweste­rn province of Idlib, the last stronghold of anti-regime forces and home to some three million people — half of them displaced by violence in other areas. Damascus loyalists have since Friday seized around 14 towns and villages around the city, reaching its eastern outskirts, the Britain-based Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights said yesterday. They have also cut a section of the M5 highway leading north from Maaret al Numan to Idlib city, according to the

Observator­y and the pro-government AlWatan newspaper.

Retaking full control of the highway is essential to the government’s efforts to rekindle a moribund economy. The fighting has forced hundreds of thousands of civilians to flee their homes, with hundreds of vehicles yesterday packing a road leading out of the flashpoint region under heavy bombardmen­t. “Maaret al-Numan is nearly besieged,” said Observator­y head Rami Abdul Rahman, explaining that regime forces were now stationed south, east and north of the city.

Pincer movement

Abdul Rahman said Damascus loyalists were now pushing from the west and northwest in a bid to tighten the noose around the opposition holdout. An AFP correspond­ent in the region said regime forces were also trying to reach the city’s southweste­rn edges to prevent rebels and jihadists from falling back.

Idlib and nearby areas of Hama, Aleppo and Latakia provinces are dominated by the Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) jihadist group, led by members of the country’s former Al-Qaeda franchise. In recent months, the regime of President Bashar AlAssad has chipped away territory under jihadist control in the four provinces, despite several ceasefire agreements. Assad has repeatedly vowed to reassert control over the whole of Syria. An AFP correspond­ent said Maaret al-Numan had become a ghost town, but the Observator­y maintained that some civilians had remained in the area despite the escalation.

Fearing further regime advances, residents of several towns and villages located north of Maarat al-Numan, have started to flee, according to the Observator­y and an

AFP correspond­ent. Pick-up trucks carrying entire families from the town of Saraqib and the Jabal al-Zawiya region packed a road leading north towards the border with Turkey, said an AFP correspond­ent. The vehicles were crammed with mattresses, clothes and household appliances, many of them belonging to families who had previously fled Maaret al-Numan. —AFP

 ??  ?? HAZZANU, Syria: Syrians arrive in trucks transporti­ng their belongings to Hazano in the northern countrysid­e of Idlib city yesterday after fleeing its southern countrysid­e during an ongoing offensive by regime forces on the northweste­rn region. —AFP
HAZZANU, Syria: Syrians arrive in trucks transporti­ng their belongings to Hazano in the northern countrysid­e of Idlib city yesterday after fleeing its southern countrysid­e during an ongoing offensive by regime forces on the northweste­rn region. —AFP

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