Fighters from Syrian al Qaeda wing close in on Shi'ite village
Members of al Qaeda's Nusra Front and other Sunni Islamists seized an area south of a Shi'ite Muslim village in north Syria on Sunday after clashes with pro-government fighters, opposition activists said.
The insurgents advanced overnight on
al-Zahra, north of Aleppo city, seizing territory to the south and also
trying to take land to the east in an attempt to capture the village,
the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.
Al-Zahra
and the nearby village of Nubl have been under a long siege by
anti-government forces in an isolated Shi'ite area. The United Nations
said in March that armed groups surrounding the villages had cut
electrical and water lines supplying 45,000 residents. The army has used
helicopters to drop supplies to the villagers.
Opposition
activists said the fighters also targeted Nubl and were seeking to
capture both in the advance on the villages, which are located along a
highway that leads to Turkey. Control of the villages could open up a
new supply line into Aleppo for the insurgents.
"We
targeted the town with dozens of mortar shells and dozens of hell
cannon shells and Nusra's forces made progress and control buildings
which are in the first line of defence of Nubl," said media activist
Ahmed Hamidou who was accompanying battalions involved in the campaign.
The
clashes killed at least eight of the fighters advancing on al-Zahra and
a number of fighters from the pro-government National Defence Force,
the Observatory said.
Villagers from both
al-Zahra and Nubl backed up forces trying to stop the Nusra-led
offensive, activists said, adding that the Syrian air force had also
reacted by bombing several other villages north of Aleppo.
An
opposition spokesman said in January that the area had been surrounded
because it had been used as a launching pad by the Syrian military to
attack Aleppo. The opposition said at the time it could lift the siege
if the Syrian military reciprocated elsewhere, but this had not
happened.
Aleppo and surrounding areas have
been hit by heavy fighting in a conflict which is now in its fourth year
and has killed some 200,000 people, according to the United Nations.
The
U.N.'s Syria mediator has said that Aleppo would be a good starting
point for local ceasefire agreements and has discussed the idea with
President Bashar al-Assad.
Further east,
Islamic State fighters shot down a Syrian war plane on Sunday close to
the eastern city of Deir al-Zor, the Observatory reported, the first
time the militant group had taken down an aircraft in that part of the
country.
Reuters
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