Syria Regime Retakes Key Aleppo District from Rebels

إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربية W460

Pro-regime forces overran a strategically important district on the southern outskirts of Syria's Aleppo Thursday, a monitor said, rolling back nearly every gain from a major month-long rebel offensive there.

The government advance in Ramussa further seals off Aleppo's opposition-held eastern districts, under renewed siege since Sunday by forces loyal to President Bashar al-Assad. 

Government forces and allied fighters "retook full control of the Ramussa district after ferocious clashes with rebels, Islamist fighters, and jihadist groups," said the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

Observatory head Rami Abdel Rahman said the capture came after reinforcements of Iraqi and Iranian pro-government militiamen arrived south of the city earlier this week.

"The regime could not afford to lose this battle, otherwise it would have lost everything," he told AFP.

Rebels and their jihadist allies had launched a major assault in Aleppo's southern outskirts on July 31 in a bid to break the government's encirclement of the eastern neighbourhoods.

They successfully opened a route into those districts a week later via Ramussa, but regime forces have managed to recapture nearly all that territory.

Abdel Rahman told AFP on Thursday that rebels still hold marginal positions in a residential complex and a school.

An AFP correspondent in the city's east said shops had been struggling since Sunday to secure goods to sell and that prices were skyrocketing.

State news agency SANA also reported that the government's armed forces advanced south of Aleppo on Thursday. 

Once Syria's commercial powerhouse, Aleppo is now a divided city, with rebel groups firing into the government-held west and regime and allied Russian warcraft pounding the opposition-controlled east.

On Wednesday, strikes by unidentified aircraft on the eastern Sukkari district left 11 civilians dead, according to the Observatory. 

Aleppo province, which borders Turkey to the north, is a patchwork of territory held by competing forces in Syria's war: rebels, the regime, Kurdish fighters, and jihadists.

The Islamic State group's last major position in the province is Al-Bab, eyed by rival Kurdish and Arab fighters backed by the US-led coalition and Ankara respectively.

At least 10 civilians were killed in the IS-held town of Taduf, near Al-Bab, in air strikes by unidentified aircraft on Wednesday, the Observatory said.

Four IS fighters were also killed in the raids and another four bodies have yet to be identified, according to the monitor.

Comments 9
Thumb .mowaten. 08 September 2016, 14:33

hehehe rami abdelrahman sounds very sore

Thumb .mowaten. 08 September 2016, 14:33

as must be the takfiri and hasbara trolls who lurk here.

Thumb .mowaten. 08 September 2016, 16:16

as must be the takfiri and hasbara trolls who lurk here.

funny how fast nahaaretz censors my comments without reason, and how long it takes them to remove the ones filled with sectarian insults

Thumb justin 08 September 2016, 16:21

good judge of character

Thumb .mowaten. 08 September 2016, 16:26

lol... yea right

Thumb walid121 08 September 2016, 16:31

Mowaten I'm not a big poster here but I have been using this site for over 30 years and recently I have been liking your posts, your the only one informing these deluded ignorants. :)

Thumb justin 08 September 2016, 16:20

and you understood from what he said the rebels were holding these positions with women and children still in them and holding them as human shields?

Your case is frightening!

Thumb .mowaten. 08 September 2016, 17:13

southern, are you insinuating that democratic us-back freedom-fighters use children as humn shields!?!?

https://www.facebook.com/zaifah.75/videos/606969222817300/

You case is frightening! Justin just soiled his pants!

Thumb .mowaten. 08 September 2016, 17:23

to the user who calls himself "bi.tizo.minteik":
weirdly enough I feel sorry for you. your life & fantasies sound painfully miserable.