Friday, 30 November 2012

Fighting rages around Damascus


DAMASCUS: Fighting raged around Damascus on Friday and Internet and phone links in Syria remained cut for a second day, as the capital’s international airport reopened to flights after heavy clashes in the area.

Delegates from more than 60 countries, meanwhile, were gathering in Tokyo to find ways to step up the pressure on President Bashar al-Assad’s regime.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the road from the capital to Damascus airport had reopened, a day after fighting during which a bus carrying airport employees was hit by a shell, killing two people.

A security source also reported the deaths, blaming rebels for the shelling, but SyrianAir director Ghida Abdellatif said that the two employees had escaped with injuries.

The United Nations said four of its staffers were also wounded when their bus was targeted by gunfire on its way to the airport on Thursday.

Air traffic resumed on Friday and the 27-kilometre (17-mile) road between the airport and the capital reopened after a night of heavy clashes between rebels and troops in the area, airport sources said.

A military source in Damascus said the army had taken control of the western side of the road leading to the airport and a small portion on the east by dawn, allowing travellers to move through.

“But the most difficult part is yet to come. The army wants to take control of the eastern side, where there are thousands of terrorists and this will take several days,” he said, using the term regime officials use for rebel fighters.

At least 15 civilians were killed in a military offensive and clashes around Damascus on Friday, including in the southeast near the airport road and in Daraya to the southwest, the Observatory said.

Warplanes pounded the northeastern town of Irbin amid shelling of orchards in the south of the capital, all opposition strongholds where rebels have rear bases, it added.

The Assad regime has been reducing its territorial ambitions to focus on Damascus, central Syria and Alawite bastions, as it digs in for a long war, according to analysts.

In the town of Tal Kalakh on the border with Lebanon, 17 young Sunni volunteers from the Lebanese city of Tripoli were killed on Friday, a Lebanese security source and a Muslim leader said.

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