News Flash
BEIRUT, Lebanon, Nov 30, 2024 (BSS/AFP) - A monitor of Syria's war said on
Saturday that rebels controlled most of Aleppo city, reporting Russian air
strikes on parts of Syria's second city for the first time since 2016.
Syria's army admitted that rebels had entered "large parts" of Aleppo and
said "dozens of men from our armed forces were killed and others wounded".
The fighters have pressed a lightning offensive against forces of the
Iranian- and Russian-backed Syrian government since Wednesday, the same day a
fragile ceasefire took effect in neighbouring Lebanon between Israel and the
Iran-backed Hezbollah group, a Damascus ally, after two months of all-out
war.
"Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) and allied factions... took control of most of
the city and government centres and prisons", said the Britain-based Syrian
Observatory for Human Rights.
HTS, a jihadist alliance led by Al-Qaeda's former Syria branch, controls
swathes of the Idlib region in Syria's northwest, as well as parts of
neighbouring Aleppo, Hama and Latakia provinces. Allied Turkish-backed rebel
factions have also been taking part in the offensive.
Overnight, Russian "warplanes launched raids on areas of Aleppo city for the
first time since 2016", added the Observatory which relies on a network of
sources inside Syria.
AFPTV images showed fires burning in part of the city after the air strikes.
Streets were largely deserted but AFP images showed rebels outside a Syrian
Telecom building and the landmark citadel.
An opposition flag hung from a traffic light.
- Praying in the city -
Some rebels prayed in the city centre and fired celebratory gunfire, later
patrolling on foot in central Aleppo, images showed.
Other fighters were seen posing with a rebel flag outside a police building
bearing a large poster of Assad, and standing below a partially-burning
billboard of the president.
Syria's army said "armed terrorist organisations" -- a term it also uses to
refer to opposition groups -- launched "a broad attack from multiple axes on
the Aleppo and Idlib fronts" and reported fierce battles "over a strip
exceeding 100 kilometres (60 miles)".
The Observatory said the overnight air strikes coincided with "the arrival of
large (rebel) military reinforcements" to the area. The war monitor also
reported that the rebels had taken dozens of towns and villages in the north.
It raised the death toll in days of clashes to 311 -- 183 from HTS and allied
factions, 100 soldiers and pro-government forces, as well as 28 civilians.
State media reported that four civilians were killed when HTS shelled a
student residence in Aleppo, a city of around two million people that was
Syria's pre-war manufacturing hub.
Pro-government radio station Sham FM reported that "armed groups were present
in a number of streets and neighbourhoods in Aleppo city amid air strikes
targeting fighters' positions west of the city".
"Most civilians are avoiding leaving their homes and public and private
institutions in the city are almost completely shut," it added.
Iran-backed groups have a heavy presence in the Aleppo region after providing
crucial ground support when the Syrian army -- backed by Russian air power --
recaptured rebel-held areas of the city in 2016.
The Observatory said that "the governor of Aleppo and the police and security
branch commanders withdrew from the city centre".
Observatory director Rami Abdel Rahman told AFP early Saturday that rebel
fighters swiftly captured swathes of Aleppo without meeting significant
resistance, adding "there has been no fighting, not a single shot was fired,
as regime forces withdrew."
The jihadists and their allies made other advances in the north, including
seizure of the strategically located town of Saraqib, on the road to Aleppo
about 40 kilometres (25 miles) southwest, the Observatory had said.
The Russian military said Friday it was bombing "extremist" forces, as Turkey
demanded a halt to bombardment on the Idlib region.
Since 2020, the Idlib area has been subject to a Turkey and Russia-brokered
truce which had largely been holding despite repeated violations.
State news agency SANA said Saturday that Foreign Minister Bassam al-Sabbagh
discussed "the latest developments in northern Syria" with his Egyptian
counterpart Badr Abdelatty.