Saturday, September 29, 2012

Syrian rebels launch “decisive battle” for Aleppo

BEIRUT, September 28, 2012



Fighting over Syria's largest city intensified on Friday with some of the fiercest battles in two months as rebel forces launched a new offensive to rout President Bashar Assad's forces from Aleppo, activists said.



The city of 3 million, once a bastion of support for Assad, has emerged as a key battleground in Syria's civil war.



Activists reported some of the fiercest clashes yet, between rebels and government forces in Aleppo, where the two sides have been stalemated for weeks.



Fighters from the main rebel group known as the Free Syrian Army began a new push to drive regime forces from their strongholds Aleppo, Syria's commercial capital on Thursday, calling it the "Decisive Battle".



The Syrian military sent text messages on cellular phones to members of the armed rebellion reading- "Game over."



Aleppo had been relatively quiet until rebels stormed parts of it in late July. Neither side has been able to deliver a decisive blow, despite sporadic clashes.



"The city is witnessing one of the most violent days. All fronts are on fire," said Aleppo-based activist Baraa al-Halabi. He said clashes had broken out in neighbourhoods including Midan, old Aleppo, Maysaloun, Azamiyeh, Salaheddine, Seif al-Dawla and Sheikh Maksoud.



Some activists and rebels said that members of the Kurdistan Workers' Party, or PKK, which for decades had close ties with the Syrian government, were participating in the Aleppo battles for the first time since the uprising against Assad's regime began in March last year.



Al-Halabi said some of the heaviest battles were taking place in a predominantly Kurdish area of Sheikh Maksoud where PKK fighters were fighting alongside regime forces.



Meanwhile, state-run Syrian TV says, government troops repulsed an attack on the neighbourhood with the help of its residents.



Rami Abdul-Rahman, who heads the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, said the pro-government gunmen in Sheikh Maksoud are local Syrians known as "Mardiliyeh", a clan known to support the regime.



The reports could not be independently confirmed because the government has imposed tight restrictions on the media.



In July, government forces withdrew from Kurdish areas in north-eastern Syria and were quickly replaced by Kurdish fighters from the Kurdish Democratic Union Party, or PYD. The group is affiliated with the PKK, rebels fighting for autonomy in the Kurdish-dominated southeast region of Turkey.



Government forces also stormed several tense neighbourhoods in the Syrian capital, Damascus, activists said. Troops raided homes looking for activists in Barzeh, Jobar and Qaboun, according to the Observatory and the Local Coordination Committees.



Both groups also reported some fighting between rebels and troops in and near the Palestinian refugee camp of Yarmouk.



In recent months, young Palestinian refugees enraged by mounting violence and moved by Arab Spring calls for greater freedoms have been taking to the streets and even joining the rebels.
News From: http://www.7StarNews.com

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