The UN Security Council has demanded humanitarian access to the Palestinian refugee camp of Yarmouk in Damascus.
One UN official described the situation for the 18,000 refugees there as "beyond inhumane".
The situation has deteriorated since 1 April, when Islamic State launched an offensive.
Palestinian
militiamen opposed to the Syrian government and some Free Syrian Army
fighters are leading the fight against the IS militants.
'This has to stop'
The
chair of the 15-member Security Council, Jordan's ambassador Dina
Kawar, called for the "protection of civilians... humanitarian
access... and life-saving assistance".
Delivering a report to the
council, Pierre Krahenbuhl, of the Palestinian Unwra relief agency, said
the situation was "more desperate than ever".
The Palestinian UN ambassador, Riyad Mansour, said that saving the refugees was his government's main priority.
He appealed to member nations to relocate the refugees elsewhere in Syria or abroad.
Analysis: Jim Muir in Beirut
Because
of its strategic location, the Syrian government has always feared
Yarmouk might be used as a springboard for a rebel thrust into the heart
of the capital.
With some reports saying IS may now control as
much as 90% of the area, that brings the militants closer than ever to
the centre of Damascus.
Government helicopters are reported to
have been dropping barrel bombs on Yarmouk, although rebel groups accuse
the regime of encouraging the spread of Islamic State, so it can
dismiss the entire rebel movement as a bunch of terrorists.
Ahmed
Majdalani, an official with the Palestine Liberation Organisation, said
a delegation was on its way to Damascus to discuss a humanitarian
corridor with the Syrian government and Palestinian factions in the
camp.
Another Unwra official, Chris Gunness, said: "The situation in the camp is beyond inhumane.
"There
is no food, there is no water and there is very little medicine...
People are holed up in their houses, there is fighting going on in the
streets. There are reports of... bombardments. This has to stop and
civilians must be evacuated."
Sunday's heavy fighting turned into sporadic clashes on Monday, monitors said.
Monitors
say IS and the al-Qaeda-affiliated Nusra Front, who have fought each
other in other parts of Syria, were working together in Yarmouk.
A few hundred people were reported to have managed to escape the camp over the weekend.
Syria's bloody conflict, which has entered its fifth year, has claimed the lives of more than 200,000 Syrians.
The
battle between forces loyal to President Bashar al-Assad, rebels
opposed to his rule and Islamic State has also driven more than 11
million people from their homes.
Yarmouk was first built for Palestinians fleeing the 1948 Arab-Israeli war.
Before
the Syrian civil war began, it had more than 150,000 refugees living
there and had its own mosques, schools and public buildings. But since
2012, the camp has been besieged by fighting.
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