ALEPPO: Syrian mortar fire again struck a Turkish border village yeterday, prompting artillery retaliation for the fourth day as fierce fighting rocked the key city of Aleppo and rebels lost ground in Damascus.
The Syrian mortar round struck Akcakale — site of a similar strike on Wednesday — as Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said President Bashar Al Assad should be replaced by Vice President Faruq Al Shara.
The mortar round hit the grounds of a public building without causing casualties, Turkey’s NTV news channel reported, adding that the building had been evacuated beforehand.
Akcakale’s mayor was quoted by the semi-official Anatolia news agency as saying yesterday’s mortar hit prompted an immediate response by Turkish artillery.
“Thank God there were no victims. Turkish artillery immediately responded to the shots that came from Syria,” Abdulhakim Ayhan said.
Syria’s commercial capital Aleppo, meanwhile, was rocked by the heaviest fighting of an almost three-month offensive against rebels, residents said. An correspondent said warplanes were overflying the rebel-held Bab Al Hadid and Shaar neighbourhoods, where witnesses reported fierce fighting.
“This is the worst fighting we’ve seen here since the beginning of the Aleppo war,” one Bab Al Hadid resident said.
“From early morning... there has been shelling on the area and clashes between the rebels in Bab Al Hadid and the army at the beginning of Arkoub district,” near the Hanano military barracks.
“It looks like the army is trying to push the rebels as far as it can from the Hanano barracks,” the resident said, asking not to be identified.
As fighting raged in Aleppo, state television said government forces had pushed rebels out of two of their strongholds in Damascus province, Qudsaya and Hameh.
“Hameh and Qudsaya in Damascus province have been cleansed from the armed terrorists,” the channel said, using the regime’s blanket term for the rebels.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the government had taken control of Hameh and said the bodies of 21 men were found there.
On July 18, rebels carried out a massive bombing in Damascus, killing Assad’s brother-in-law, the defence minister and a general.
Since then, regime forces have pushed the rebels to the outskirts of the capital but have lost control of several border crossings and are battling to fully retake Aleppo.
The Observatory, which gave a toll of 50 people killed so far on Sunday, also reported that regime forces pounded the rebel-held town of Tal-Abyad in the northern province of Raqa, on the border with Turkey.
Turkey on Friday shelled a Syrian military position south of Tal-Abyad, as part of its retaliation for Wednesday’s killings in Akcakale.
On Saturday, rebels cemented their control of Syria’s northern frontier after seizing the town of Khirbat al-Joz in the northwest province of Idlib after a pitched battle with regime troops, the Observatory said.
“The clashes at Khirbat aAl Joz... ended when fighters of the rebel brigades took control of the area,” said the Britain-based watchdog.
“The fighting lasted more than 12 hours and resulted in at least 40 dead among the regular forces, including five officers, and nine (rebel) fighters,” it added.
Nearly 80 percent of towns and villages along the border are now outside regime control, according to the Observatory.
With tensions between Turkey and Syria spiking, Davutoglu urged that Shara take the helm in Syria. “Farouq Al Shara is a man of reason and conscience and he has not taken part in the massacres in Syria. Nobody knows the system better than he,” Davutoglu said on public television channel TRT.
He stressed that the Syrian opposition “is inclined to accept Shara” as a future leader.
AFP