Qatar Tribune

Dozens killed as Damascus presses Idlib offensive

Clashes broke out south of the city of Maaret Al-Numan despite the Russian-Turkish truce: Human Rights

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DOZENS of fighters and civilians were killed in Syria’s Idlib province as the government pressed a deadly offensive on Thursday towards a key town in the country’s last rebel bastion.

The latest violence, which followed air strikes that killed 19 civilians on Wednesday, buried a ceasefire deal announced by Russia and rebel backer Turkey that never really took hold.

“Clashes broke out around midnight on Wednesday south of the city of Maaret alNuman, together with heavy bombardmen­t despite the Russian-Turkish truce,” Rami Abdel Rahman, head of the Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights, said.

According to the Britainbas­ed war monitor, the fighting raged in areas south of Maaret al-Numan, the key target of the Syrian government’s latest military offensive.

At least 26 anti-government fighters were killed, most of them members of Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, a group that includes fighters from the former Al-Qaeda affiliate in Syria.

The Observator­y said 29 government troops and allied militia were also killed in the fighting.

The Syrian state news agency SANA later reported that at least four civilians were killed by rocket fire on the city of Aleppo.

Jihadist and rebel groups are present west of northern city, on which hey routinely launch rocket attacks.

Abdel Rahman said that government forces were now just seven kilometres (less than five miles) from Maaret al-Numan, a town that was one of the bastions of the uprising against President Bashar alAssad’s rule.

Nearly nine years into the conflict, protests against the

government are still held in some of the province’s towns.

In the city of Idlib itself, 19 civilians were killed and several others wounded in Russian and Syrian air strikes on Wednesday, the Observator­y said.

AFP reporters saw scenes of chaos after the strikes, that blew several buildings in an industrial zone to smithereen­s.

“We live here without

knowing if there is really a truce or if it’s just in the media. On the ground, there is no truce. People are afraid, the markets are empty,” Sari Bitar, a 32-year-old engineer living in Idlib city told AFP on Thursday.

“Just like everybody else, I can’t stay in an area on which the regime, Russian forces and Iranian militia will advance,”

he said.

“The only problem is that there is nowhere to go,” Bitar said. “Syria is now limited to this geographic­al area, which is getting smaller day by day.”

Assad has repeatedly pledged to continue the reconquest that Russia’s 2015 military interventi­on kickstarte­d until all Syrian territory has been reclaimed.

 ?? AFP) ?? Displaced Syrians ride with their belongings as they flee bombardmen­t in Urum Al-Kubra town in Syria’s northweste­rn Aleppo province on Wednesday.
AFP) Displaced Syrians ride with their belongings as they flee bombardmen­t in Urum Al-Kubra town in Syria’s northweste­rn Aleppo province on Wednesday.

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