Clashes and air strikes shook the Syrian city of Aleppo yesterday, as heavy fighting resumed after the end of a three-day ceasefire declared by government ally Russia.
The unilateral ceasefire ended without any evacuations by the UN, which had hoped to bring wounded civilians out of the rebel-held east and deliver aid after weeks of government bombardment and a three-month siege.
An AFP correspondent in the east of the city reported fresh air strikes on rebel-held neighbourhoods and the sound of fighting yesterday afternoon.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said strikes and artillery fire hit eastern districts yesterday after heavy clashes overnight along the front line that divides the city’s government-held west from the east.
Rebel shelling also hit two western neighbourhoods yesterday, the Britain-based monitor said.
The Observatory late on Saturday had reported the first air strikes since Moscow announced a temporary halt in the Syrian army’s Russian-backed offensive to recapture the east of the city.
It said at least three people were wounded in artillery fire on the east of the city, while rebels fired a barrage of rockets and mortar shells on a government-held neighbourhood.
Government forces and allied fighters, meanwhile, had advanced on the southern outskirts of Aleppo, the Observatory said yesterday, seizing territory overlooking the rebel-held areas of Rashideen and Khan Tuman.
The fighting killed at least 20 fighters, mostly from the former Al Qaeda affiliate, the Fateh al-Sham Front, the monitor said.
The ceasefire was intended to allow civilians and rebels to leave the east.
The army had opened eight evacuation corridors, but only a handful of civilians were reported to have crossed through a single passage.
Russian officials and Syrian state media accused rebels of preventing people from leaving and using civilians as “human shields”.
Nearly 500 people have been killed and more then 2,000 wounded since the Syrian army launched a September 22 operation to recapture eastern Aleppo.
The United Nations had hoped to use the “humanitarian pause” to evacuate seriously wounded people and possibly deliver aid.
But a UN official said on Saturday the requisite security guarantees had once again not been received.
“You have various parties to the conflict and those with influence and they all have to be on the same page on this and they are not,” said David Swanson, a spokesman for the UN humanitarian office.
No aid has entered Aleppo since July 7 and UN chief Ban Ki-moon has warned food rations will run out by the end of the month.
The UN had asked Moscow to consider extending the pause until Monday evening, but there was no indication from Russia that it would.