
DAMASCUS: Government forces seized territory inside Syria’s rebel enclave Eastern Ghouta on Saturday, intensifying fighting as tens of thousands of civilians in the besieged enclave near Damascus awaited urgently needed aid.
On another front in Syria’s seven-year civil war, Turkish air strikes killed 36 pro-regime fighters in a Kurdish enclave near Turkey’s border.
Syria’s war has killed more than 340,000 people and spiralled into a complex conflict involving world powers since it started in 2011 with the brutal repression of anti-government protests.
Russia-backed regime forces have since February 18 killed more than 640 civilians, including over 150 children, in a ferocious bombardment of Eastern Ghouta, one of the armed opposition’s last strongholds in the country.
Following a deadly wave of air strikes and shelling, fighting on the ground has intensified in recent days, and the regime now “controls 10 percent of the besieged Eastern Ghouta region”, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said late Saturday.
Regime forces have advanced steadily since Thursday, the Britain-based monitor said earlier, recapturing four areas in the east and southeast of the enclave as well as two air bases.
“Regime forces and their allies have intensified their attacks on rebel positions in the past 48 hours,” Observatory head Rami Abdel Rahman said.
The progress has been rapid through mainly agricultural land, he added. “The terrorists will soon taste defeat in Ghouta,” said Syria’s Deputy Foreign Minister Ayman Soussan.
Eastern Ghouta’s 400,000 residents have lived under siege since 2013, facing severe food and medicine shortages even before the latest offensive.