CHAIRMAN: DR. KHALID BIN THANI AL THANI
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: PROF. KHALID MUBARAK AL-SHAFI

Default / Miscellaneous

Rebel mortar fire hits Damascus

Published: 26 Mar 2013 - 10:08 am | Last Updated: 03 Feb 2022 - 02:04 pm


A Syrian firefighter dousing a car that caught fire following a blast in the Al Halbuni district of Damascus, yesterday.

Damascus/BEIRUT: Syrian rebels lobbed mortar rounds into central Damascus yesterday, killing at least two people and drawing a fierce army response as bombardments shook the heart of the capital.

The state news agency said mortar bombs fired by “terrorists” had killed two people and wounded others near the Opera House on Ummayad Square, where Baath Party headquarters, Air Force Intelligence and state television are also located.

The military retaliated with artillery fire from Mount Qasioun, overlooking the city. “I’ve heard dozens of regime shells so far, pounding rebels,” one resident said. 

Photos posted by opposition activists showed black smoke rising from the square during what residents said was one of the heaviest bombardments in central Damascus since a revolt against President Bashar Al Assad erupted two years ago. 

“The city is under attack,” said one bewildered resident, adding that the explosions had begun at 6:30am.

The conflict in Syria has killed 70,000 people and forced a million to flee the country, the United Nations says. Sustained fighting in Damascus could send thousands more into neighbouring states, especially Lebanon, which already hosts 370,000 of them.

There were no immediate reports that the rebels, who have pushed into the Kfar Souseh district, a few hundred metres (yards) from Ummayad Square, were trying to advance further.

Assad’s forces have retained control of central Damascus and most other Syrian cities, while losing swathes of territory to insurgents elsewhere, especially in the north and east.

Various rebel units fight under the banner of the FSA, which has struggled to find weapons supplies and build a disciplined command and control structure. It does not include some Islamist militants such as the powerful Aal Qaeda-linked Nusra Front.

Moaz Alkhatib, who resigned on Sunday as head of the opposition Syrian National Coalition, said the attack on Asaad was part of a drive to “assassinate the free leaders of Syria”.

Despite stepping down, Alkhatib said he would address an Arab League summit in Qatar this week. “I have decided to give a speech in the name of the Syrian people at the Doha conference,” he wrote on his Twitter account on Monday.

Alkhatib, named leader of the coalition formed in November, is a Sunni Muslim cleric who had been seen as a moderate bulwark against the influence of al Qaeda-linked jihadist forces.

He resigned after the coalition berated him for offering Assad a negotiated deal and after the group went ahead, despite his objections, with steps to form a provisional government that would have diminished his authority.

The coalition is backed by Western powers and many Arab states, but Russia and China are critical of its insistence that Assad quit as a precondition for negotiations.

Ahmed Moaz Alkhatib’s abrupt decision to step down from the National Coalition has underscored divisions among the opposition, but US officials said Washington would not withdraw its backing for the group.

“We’re sorry to see him go,” White House deputy press secretary Josh Earnest told a press conference. But he said that “Khatib’s announcement does not change the US policy of support for the Syrian opposition and the Syrian opposition coalition.”

The United States backed “the coalition’s vision for a tolerant, inclusive Syria that respects the rights of all Syrians. A senior Russian diplomat said his country wanted Russian and Chinese experts to take part in a UN investigation into charges that chemical arms were used in Syria on March 19. Agencies