Volunteers try to extricate 10-year-old Mahmoud Fayad from the rubble of a destroyed house after an air raid in Saraqeb in northwestern Syria yesterday. The boy was rescued but his mother and sister were believed to have been killed in the attack.


Reuters/Beirut


Syrian rebels advanced on the northern town of Khan al-Assal yesterday, activists said, and appeared close to seizing one of the last towns in the western part of Aleppo province still held by President Bashar al-Assad’s forces.
The army has been attempting a slow build-up of troops around the province in order to retake Aleppo city, once Syria’s biggest commercial hub. So far Assad’s push has been dogged by rebel counter-attacks, although a string of government victories elsewhere in Syria has shifted the battlefield tide in his favour after more than two years of bloodshed.
Elsewhere in northern Syria, Assad’s forces launched a third day of heavy air strikes on the town of Saraqeb in Idlib province. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said that by late afternoon, jets had already flown 12 raids over the town. Initial counts said five had been killed yesterday, three of them children.
Neighbouring Idlib and Aleppo provinces are regions in northern Syria that have become a stronghold for rebels fighting to end four decades of rule by the Assad family.
Rebels have been blockading government-held areas in Aleppo city, Syria’s largest urban centre. Aleppo has been mired in a bloody stalemate since rebels launched an offensive in the province last year.
Assad’s forces have been on the offensive since last month when the army, backed by militants from the powerful Lebanese guerrilla group Hezbollah, recaptured a border town near Lebanon straddling supply lines between Damascus and Syria’s seacoast.
Hezbollah-backed Syrian forces have been bearing down hard on rebel pockets around Damascus and other parts of the central province of Homs, part of a strategy to cement control of a belt of territory between the capital and his stronghold on the Mediterranean coast, before focusing on other regions.
While his forces seem to be nearing that goal around Homs and on the outskirts of the capital, they have made little progress around the northern and southern borders where rebels have a foothold.
Around Damascus, the army has made gains in the countryside but has faced an uptick of rebel bomb attacks inside the capital in recent weeks. The rebels often use car bombs and other explosives to hit at areas where they have a weaker presence.
An improvised explosive device hit a central neighbourhood of Damascus yesterday, killing one person and wounding several others, according to the Britain-based Observatory, which has a network of activists across Syria.
Activists also said that several rockets hit the central Abbassid Square of the city, damaging several buildings.
In recent weeks the rebels have been making slow but persistent progress in Daraa province in the south thanks to a fresh but intermittent influx of weapons coming in from neighbouring Jordan.
In Aleppo, near the Turkish border, hardline Islamist rebels - some of them linked to Al Qaeda - appear to be leading the fight to seize Khan al-Assal, according to activists in the area who asked not to be named.
Assad’s forces have responded to the rebel advance on Khan al-Assal with a string of air raids in the area that set alight swathes of nearby farmland, according to the Observatory.
It counted at least 12 soldiers and four rebels killed in the latest fighting.



Related Story