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Syria army cuts off main town in Ghouta rebel enclave

AFP  |  Douma (Syria) 

Syrian regime forces today cut off the largest town in Eastern from the rest of the opposition enclave in a blow to beleaguered rebels defending their last bastion near Government troops and allied militia have recaptured half of the besieged region in a blistering assault launched on February 18 that has left nearly 1,000 civilians dead and prompted global outcry. They have pursued a divide-and-conquer strategy, eating away at rebel-held towns and successfully isolating Ghouta's main town of today. Regime fighters seized control of the road linking with the town of further west, and also captured the town of Misraba, according to the for Human Rights. "Regime forces have therefore divided Eastern into three parts - and its surroundings, in the west, and the rest of the towns further south," the Britain-based monitor said. Shelling and air strikes slammed into on Saturday, trapping residents inside cellars transformed into makeshift bomb shelters, an in the town said. Rescue workers and medics were struggling to navigate the town's rubble-littered roads to bring wounded residents back to field clinics. Douma's opposition-run local council issued an urgent "distress call" today to international organisations. "The bomb shelters and basements are full, and people are sleeping in the streets and in public gardens," the statement said. "For three days, it has been hard to bury the dead because of the intense bombing on the cemetery," it added. Eastern is the last remaining opposition-controlled zone on the outskirts of the capital, and government troops have zeroed in on it in order to secure Rebels in recent days tried to slow the advance with an attempted counter-offensive, but Bashar al-Assad's forces steamrolled their efforts. Syrian state television on Saturday reported the had "intensified its operations... and was advancing in three main zones." It broadcast live footage from a neighbourhood in recently recaptured from the Dozens of civilians including women and toddlers could be seen in a dark basement, surrounded by troops. One elderly man broke down into tears as he told state television that his family had fled to under fierce bombardment. The offensive has killed more than 975 civilians, including more than 200 children, and wounded several thousand people, according to the Observatory, which relies on a network of sources on the ground. Eastern is home to around 400,000 people, in desperate need of humanitarian assistance after the five-year siege made and medical aid exceedingly rare. Yesterday, a joint aid convoy of the International Committee of the Red Cross, the and the Syrian delivered aid to hunger-stricken residents. It was the second convoy in one week, after deliveries on Monday were interrupted by heavy bombardment. The UN refugee agency's representative, who entered with Monday's convoy, said the area was "on the verge of a major disaster". "I've never seen such scared faces in my life," said. He described seeing a five-storey building that had been reduced to rubble, with a powerful stench emanating from several bodies trapped underneath. In addition to clashes around Douma, fighting on Saturday raged to the west near the town of and further south near Hammuriyeh, Saqba, and Efteris. Two Islamist groups are the most prominent rebel factions in Ghouta, but jihadists from (HTS) - once linked to Al-Qaeda's branch - also have a presence. Yesterday, 13 HTS members and their family members were bussed out of the enclave.

Rebels said they would be taken to the HTS-controlled northern province of Idlib, in an arrangement struck following consultations with the UN and international players. Such evacuation deals have been repeatedly agreed in Syria's seven-year war, most notably in the second city of in late 2016. After a ferocious month-long government assault, thousands of rebel fighters and civilians were bussed out of the city's east. That paved the way for to announce the full recapture of - the largest defeat to date for the fractured opposition movement. Syria's conflict erupted with protests against Assad but has since developed into a full-blown war that has drawn in global powers. has intervened on Assad's behalf while has backed rebels against his regime, rival jihadists and Kurdish forces. Today, Ankara-backed rebels advanced against in northwest Syria, coming to within two kilometres (just over one mile) of the flashpoint town of Afrin, according to the Observatory. The move came as Turkish threatened again to "purge" from the town.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Sat, March 10 2018. 22:20 IST
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