A picture taken in the Yarmuk Palestinian refugee
camp in southern Damascus on April 27 shows smoke billowing in the area
during Syrian army shelling and airstrikes. Syrian regime forces
advanced against Islamic State group jihadists in the south of Damascus,
state media said, after more than a week of bombardment on the area.
(AFP/Rami Al Sayed)
Syrian regime air strikes and shelling killed 17 civilians including
seven children on Friday in the Palestinian camp of Yarmuk in southern
Damascus, a Britain-based monitor said.
Regime forces have pounded southern districts of the capital since
April 19 to try to expel the Islamic State group from the area, after
the jihadists refused to leave under an evacuation deal.
That bombardment intensified on Friday, the Syrian Observatory for
Human Rights monitor said, as regime forces advanced against IS inside
the districts.
"Army units backed by the air force and artillery have advanced on
numerous axes" in southern Damascus, including the district of Hajar
al-Aswad, "after breaking through terrorist defences", state news agency
SANA said.
The advance "inflicted great human and material losses" on the jihadists, it said.
Syrian state television said the army has seized control of buildings
and a "network of trenches and tunnels" from IS in Hajar al-Aswad.
In the adjacent neighbourhood of Qadam, two children were killed in "mortar rounds fired by terrorist groups", it said.
The Observatory said pro-government forces took control of "buildings
and streets in Hajar al-Aswad and Qadam after attacking the districts
at dawn".
Regime forces were locked in violent clashes with IS fighters on Friday morning, the monitor said.
Heavy air strikes and shelling had targeted Yarmuk and the edges of Hajar al-Aswad and Qadam since the early morning.
IS has held parts of Hajar al-Aswad and Yarmuk since 2015 and seized Qadam last month.
At least 74 regime personnel and 59 IS fighters have been killed in
eight days of fighting in southern Damascus, the monitor said.
The latest civilian deaths bring to 36 the number of non-fighters killed in regime bombardment in that same period, it said.
Yarmuk and the surroundings are now IS's largest urban redoubt in Syria or neighbouring Iraq.
The jihadists have lost much of the territory they once controlled in
both countries since they declared a cross-border caliphate there in
2014.
Yarmuk was once home to around 160,000 people, but today just a few
hundred people remain, the United Nations' agency for Palestinian
refugees has said.
President Bashar al-Assad's regime set its sights on the south of the
capital after reconquering a major rebel bastion east of Damascus
earlier this month.
Eastern Ghouta fell after a blistering air and ground assault and
Russia-backed evacuation deals that saw tens of thousands of people
bussed out to northern Syria.
More than 350,000 people have been killed and millions displaced
since Syria's war started in 2011 with the brutal repression of
anti-government protests.
Agence France-Presse
- thejakartapost
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