Clashes continued in Damascus and several other areas of Syria
on Sunday for the third day of what was meant to be a four-day
cease-fire.
The UN-backed truce, declared for the Muslim holiday Eid al
Adha, was seen as a long shotSyrian troops shelled rebellious suburbs of Damascus and
clashed with rebel fighters in several other areas of the country
Sunday, the third day of what was meant to be a four-day holiday truce,
activists said.
A U.N-backed truce declared for the Muslim holiday of Eid al-Adha has
so far failed to take hold, with fighting reported from the start.
Activists said more than 150 people were killed Friday, the start of the
holiday, and more than 120 people on the second day, on par with
previous daily casualty tolls.
The cease-fire was seen as a long shot. The international mediator in
Syria, Lakhdar Brahimi, failed to get firm commitments from all
combatants. At least one rebel-linked radical Islamic group, Jabhat
al-Nusra, rejected the truce outright.
The truce was called as the two sides were battling over strategic
targets in a largely deadlocked civil war. This includes a military base
near a main north-south highway, the main supply route to Aleppo,
Syria’s largest city, where regime forces and rebels have been fighting
house-to-house. It appears each side feared the other could exploit a
lull to improve its positions.
With the unraveling of the cease-fire, it’s unclear what the
international community can do next. The holiday truce marked the first
attempt in six months to reduce the bloodshed in Syria, where activists
say more than 35,000 people have been killed in 19 months.
Brahimi has not said what would follow a cease-fire. Talks between
Assad and the Syrian opposition on a peaceful transition are blocked,
since the Syrian leader’s opponents say they will not negotiate unless
he resigns, a step he has refused to take.
In renewed fighting Sunday, regime troops shelled the eastern
Damascus suburbs of Arbeen, Harasta and Zamalka to try to drive out
rebels there, according to the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for
Human Rights, which compiles information from activists in Syria.
Another activist group, the Local Coordination Committees, said
regime forces shelled Arbeen and Harasta, adding that eight people were
killed Sunday in Damascus and its suburbs.
Both groups also reported regime airstrikes in the area. However,
amateur video posted online Sunda appeared ambiguous. One video showed
two huge clouds of smoke rising from what was said to be Arbeen, and the
sound of an airplane could be heard in the background. However, it was
not clear whether the video showed the aftermath of shelling or an
airstrike.
The video appeared consistent with Associated Press reporting in the area.
In Douma, another Damascus suburb, rebels wrested three positions from
regime forces, including an unfinished high-rise building that had
been used by regime snipers, according to the Observatory and Mohammed
Saeed, a local activist.
Fighting was also reported near Maaret al-Numan, a town along the
Aleppo-Damascus highway that rebels seized earlier this month.
Opposition fighters have also besieged a nearby military base and
repeatedly attacked government supply convoys heading there. The
Observatory said the Syrian air force fired missiles and dropped barrel
bombs, or makeshift weapons made of explosives stuffed into barrels, on
villages near the base.
The Syrian government has accused the rebels of violating the
cease-fire from the start. The state-run news agency SANA said
opposition fighters carried out attacks in a number of areas, including
in Aleppo and the eastern town of Deir el-Zour.