REGIME FORCES ADVANCE IN SYRIA'S BATTERED GHOUTA: MONITOR
Syrian regime forces have
advanced inside Eastern Ghouta, a monitor said on Saturday, as fighting
intensifies on the ground to retake the battered rebel enclave east of
Damascus.
Russia-backed
government forces on February 18 launched an assault of the besieged region,
pounding the area with air strikes, killing more than 630 civilians.
On February 25,
clashes on the ground between the armed opposition and regime forces
intensified on the edges of the enclave, the Britain-based Syrian Observatory
for Human Rights monitor said.
Since Thursday,
regime forces have advanced inside the region, retaking an area in the enclave's
southeast, as well as another and two military bases in the south from main
opposition group Jaish al-Islam.
"Regime forces
and their allies have intensified their attacks on rebel positions in the past
48 hours," Observatory head Rami Abdel Rahman said.
Government fighters
are trying to advance inside Eastern Ghouta to cut off the main town of Douma
and its surroundings in the north of the enclave, as well as isolate the
southeastern area of Al-Marj, Abdel Rahman said.
The Observatory says
"Russian advisors" are taking part in the battles alongside regime
forces in Eastern Ghouta, backed by heavy air strikes and shelling.
Since February 25,
60 regime and allied fighters have been killed, while 34 rebels from Jaish
al-Islam have also died, it said.
Rebels today control
only a third of the area they once held in Eastern Ghouta in 2012, as regime
forces have gradually taken back territory from them.
Eastern Ghouta's
400,000 residents have lived under regime siege since 2013, facing severe food
and medicine shortages even before the latest offensive.
The ground offensive
coincides with the start of a five-hour daily "humanitarian pause"
announced by Russia and in force since Tuesday.
The bombardment has
lessened but continued to claim lives since, and trucks loaded with desperately
needed aid have remained unable to enter the enclave.
Moscow said it would
provide safe passage to non-combatants wishing to leave the enclave during the
pause, but no Syrian civilians have left since Tuesday, according to the
Observatory.
The daily pause
falls far short of a nationwide 30-day ceasefire demanded by the UN Security
Council at the weekend.
More than 340,000
people have been killed and millions have fled their homes since the start of
Syria's civil war in 2011 with the brutal repression of anti-government
protests.
SOURCE: AFP
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