ALEPPO: Several thousand Syrian rebels yesterday launched what they said would be a decisive battle for control of the strategic northern city of Aleppo. “Tonight, Aleppo will be ours or we will be defeated,” Abu Furat, a rebel commander, said.
His announcement came after more than 300 people were killed nationwide on Wednesday in what the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said was the bloodiest day of the 18-month conflict so far.
A correspondent saw dozens of rebels grouping in Aleppo’s northern Izaa quarter and firing mortars as they spoke to other groups by walkie-talkie. In a video posted on YouTube in the name of the most important rebel unit, the Al Tawhid Brigade, a man in civilian clothing clutching a walkie-talkie is seen giving instructions.
“Today the attack against Bashar’s army began on all fronts,” he says, referring to President Bashar Al Assad’s forces. “God willing, today’s battle in Aleppo will be decisive.” “Don’t kill any prisoners,” he orders. “Disarm them and hand them over to the security committee of the revolution. Each man to his post.”
The Observatory reported fierce combat in the early evening in the districts of Izaa and Saif Al Dawla in the southwest, involving “hundreds of rebel fighters.”
Aleppo has seen raging clashes since July, when rebels launched an offensive to capture the commercial capital. After some early successes, the rebel campaign slowed because of a shortage of ammunition.
At least seven civilians were killed yesterdayon Thursday in the northern metropolis as troops pummelled districts across the southwest and the east, the Britain-based Observatory said.
The violence came after a car bomb exploded at an army checkpoint overnight in the northwest province of Idlib, about 25km south of Aleppo on the highway to Damascus. Rebels then attacked the checkpoint and fierce clashes raged, the watchdog said.
In what appeared to be the same attack, a military source said clashes erupted overnight at a checkpoint in the same area after a minibus exploded.
“When we saw the bus with just one driver and no one else in it, we thought it was suspicious and told him to stop. He didn’t and when we shot the driver the bus veered off the road and exploded,” the source said. Activist footage posted on YouTube showed pandemonium in the town, as men formed lines in a race to move chunks of rubble and the crowd began shouting as a small limp girl was lifted up and handed to a grey-haired man.
The authenticity of the video could not be verified independently. At least 59 people - 38 civilians, 16 soldiers and five rebels - were killed nationwide yesterday, the watchdog said.
More than 30,000 people have been killed in Syria since the beginning of the revolt, said the Observatory, which gathers its information from a network of activists, doctors, lawyers and other sources on the ground.
Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan lashed out at Russia, China and Iran yesterday, saying their stance on the crisis in neighbouring Syria was allowing a massacre to go on unabated.
Erdogan has been one of Syrian President Bashar Al Assad’s harshest critics, accusing him of creating a “terrorist state”, allowing the Syrian opposition to organise on Turkish soil, and pushing for a foreign-protected safe zone inside Syria.
“The main source of disappointment is Russia. Let alone raising its voice against Syria, it stands by the massacre,” Erdogan said in an interview broadcast live on Turkish television station NTV.
“China stands by Russia, and although (Chinese President) Hu Jintao had told me they wouldn’t veto the plan (for a safe zone) for a third time, they did at the UN vote,” Erdogan said.
He described Iran’s position on the 18-month-old uprising against Assad as “impossible to understand”.AFP