Rebels seeks to break Aleppo siege

Published: 3 August 2016, 08:04 AM
Rebels seeks to break Aleppo siege

Intense fighting has continued around the Syrian city of Aleppo, where a rebel offensive is trying to break a government siege of rebel-held areas.

Over the weekend, the rebels tried to reconnect an encircled area in the east with insurgent territory in the west.
They set off a huge tunnel bomb underneath army positions in the strategic Ramouseh district, reports BBC.

The army has been fighting back with the help of Russian air strikes to stop the rebels breaking through.

Around a quarter of a million civilians are living under siege in rebel-held areas since government forces cut them off last month.

‘We are now overlooking the Ramousah area but Russian jets are intensifying their bombing, which is holding us back from moving quickly,’ a rebel commander told Reuters news agency.

Another rebel source told Reuters that about 10,000 troops, at least 95 tanks and several hundred rocket launchers had been deployed for what he described as the ‘great epic battle of Aleppo’.

The source said scores of suicide bombers had also been prepared to drive explosive-laden military vehicles into army posts.

The UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights has described the rebel offensive as the largest so far, involving fighting across the divided city`s main battle fronts.

Government troops supported by Russian warplanes have put up a fierce defence, the observatory adds.
‘This has slowed the offensive and allowed regime troops to retake five of the eight positions that rebels had taken since Sunday,’ observatory head Rami Abdel Rahman said.

The observatory said 50 rebel fighters and jihadists had been killed since the operation began on Sunday, as well as dozens of government soldiers.

It has been reported that barrels suspected to contain chlorine gas were dropped on the town of Saraqeb near Aleppo.

About 30 people, mostly women and children, were reported to have been affected. Chlorine gas can cause victims to become short of breath and to foam blood from the mouth. It is not clear who was responsible.

The attack took place near to where a Russian military transport helicopter was shot down by rebels hours earlier killing all five personnel on board.

It was the deadliest single incident for Russia’s military since its air campaign began last September.
The Russian government has responded to US criticism over its actions in Syria by arguing that it is ‘unacceptable’ to demand restraint around Aleppo.

Aleppo was once Syria’s commercial capital and also boasted a rich architectural and archaeological heritage.
Much of it has been destroyed or looted during more than five years of war.

Russia and Syria have announced the opening of what they called humanitarian corridors for civilians and rebels wanting to surrender but few people are reported to have used them.

One resident told the BBC daily life in the city was now incredibly hard: ‘Starting from the basic food it has completely disappeared. I mean vegetables, because they come from the countryside and it is full of buildings, this area, so there is no land for farming or to do some agriculture.

‘The people are afraid because those families who have children who should provide their children with milk; there is no milk in the markets.

‘Public transportation has completely stopped because of the lack of fuel and you know now we are in the summer and it is very hard to go around in the day at all so people keep staying inside their houses and also it is better to avoid shelling.’