AFP/Damascus


Syrian rebels attacked army positions in the northern province of Aleppo yesterday while violence also raged in and around the capital, monitors and residents said.
Regime forces shelled the northeast and southwest outskirts of Damascus as clashes broke out in the western district of Kfar Sousa and in the south of the city, a watchdog said.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights gave an initial toll of nine people killed in violence nationwide, after 61 people died on Friday, including 21 in the Damascus region.
Yesterday, troops attacked the town of Daraya near Damascus, the scene of the worst massacre in the 20-month conflict where more than 500 people were killed in late August, according to monitors.
“Regime forces are attempting to break into Daraya,” said the Local Co-ordination Committees, a network of activists on the ground.
An official source quoted by state media said the assault on Daraya “led to the elimination of a number of the most dangerous terrorist snipers of Al Qaeda who were holed up in the homes of displaced residents”.
In the central province of Homs, the Observatory and activists reported fierce bombardment of the rebel-held towns of Qusayr and Rastan, which the army has been trying to retake for months.
In northern Syria, insurgents went on the offensive, attacking troops guarding the strategic Tishrin dam, located on the Euphrates river between the Aleppo and Raqa provinces.
The rebels have surrounded the area, about 10km from the town of Manbij, local resident Abu Mohamed said.
Opposition fighters already control one of the main routes to Raqa and the Tishrin dam would give them a second passage, connecting a wide expanse of territory between the two provinces, both of which border Turkey.
In Aleppo city, the commercial capital where fighting has reached stalemate after five months of deadly urban combat, clashes broke out near an air force intelligence building, the Britain-based Observatory said.
In Hasakeh province, northwest Syria, Ras al-Ain has seen its fiercest violence since the town near the Turkish border was captured by rebels two weeks ago, a resident said.
“There are so few people, most have left. There is no electricity, no water and no mobile coverage,” said Ali, a farmer in his 40s, who fled with his family yesterday.
Hundreds of fighters loyal to the Kurdish Democratic Union Party (PYD) - which has close ties to Turkey’s rebel Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) - have been locked in fierce battles with fighters of the jihadist Al Nusra Front and allied Ghuraba al-Sham group in Ras al-Ain in recent days.
The Observatory, which relies on a network of activists, lawyers and medics, later reported that clashes had died down after the two parties managed to strike an agreement.

Related Story