The Borneo Post

Assad vows to retake key area near Damascus

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DAMASCUS: Syrian President Bashar al-Assad has vowed to retake an area that supplies Damascus with water and rejected any negotiatio­ns on his departure at upcoming talks in Kazakhstan.

Millions of people have been without water for weeks after fighting damaged key infrastruc­ture in the Wadi Barada region outside Damascus that is the main water source for the capital.

The government says former al- Qaeda affiliate Fateh al- Sham Front, known previously as AlNusra Front, is present in Wadi Barada, and blames rebels there for cutting water to Damascus since December 22.

“The role of the Syrian Army is to liberate that area in order to prevent those terrorists from using that water in order to suffocate the capital,” Assad told French media in an interview aired Monday.

Assad's forces have been battling rebels in Wadi Barada for weeks and the fighting has continued despite the start on December 30 of a nationwide ceasefire brokered by Russia and Turkey.

Assad said the ceasefire was being “breached on a daily basis” and mainly around Damascus “because the terrorists occupy the main source of water” in Wadi Barada.

He said “more than five million civilians have been deprived of water for the last three weeks” as

The role of the Syrian Army is to liberate that area in order to prevent those terrorists from using that water in order to suffocate the capital. Bashar al-Assad, Syrian President

a result of the fighting.

The United Nations says 5.5 million people in and around Damascus are without water.

Assad said that Fateh al- Sham is 'occupying' the Wadi Barada region, 15 kilometres northwest of the capital.

But rebels deny that the jihadists are in the area and say the water supply was severed after government strikes hit pumping facilities.

Assad also insisted that the ceasefire does not include Fateh al- Sham or its formidable rival, the Islamic State group ( IS).

Regime forces and fighters from Lebanon's Shiite movement Hezbollah on Monday clashed with rebels and some Fateh Al-Sham jihadists in the Wadi Barada area, the Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights said.

Also Monday, the Observator­y said IS had blown up a natural gas plant that supplied one-third of Syria's electricit­y.

“In the past 48 hours, IS blew up the Hayyan gas plant in eastern Homs province, putting it totally out of order,” said the Britainbas­ed group that tracks the country's civil war using sources on the ground.

A source at the Syrian oil ministry confirmed the explosion to AFP.

The plant had already ceased to operate one month ago, after the advance of the jihadists in the central region of Palmyra.

Assad meanwhile rejected any negotiatio­ns towards his departure from power at talks set to be held in late January in Kazakhstan's capital Astana.

“My position is related to the constituti­on, and the constituti­on is very clear about the mechanism in which you can bring a president or get rid of a president,” he said.

“So, if they (the opposition) want to discuss this point, they have to discuss the constituti­on, and the constituti­on is not owned by the government or the president or by the opposition.

“It should be owned by the Syrian people, so you need a referendum,” he said.

The Astana talks, organised by regime allies Russia and Iran and rebel backer Turkey, aim to pave the way towards an end to a nearly six-year war that has killed 310,000 people and displaced millions.

Assad has said Syrian forces are on their way to victory after they recaptured the northern city of Aleppo on December 22 with support from Moscow and Tehran. — Reuters

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 ??  ?? A Syrian man walks past destroyed buildings in the rebel-held town of Douma, on the eastern outskirts of the capital Damascus. — AFP photo
A Syrian man walks past destroyed buildings in the rebel-held town of Douma, on the eastern outskirts of the capital Damascus. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? Bashar al-Assad
Bashar al-Assad

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