- Dec 7, 2016 11H:15 GMT/UTC/ZULU TIME
- Middle East
Syrian rebels have left the last areas they held in Aleppo's old city, while calling for a five-day truce to allow the evacuation of civilians.
Activist monitoring group the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the pull-back in Syria's second city came after days of heavy fighting.
State media confirmed the military had taken over the whole of the old city.
Government forces now control about 75% of eastern Aleppo, held by the rebels for the past four years.
The rebels, who had been left with just a spit of land north-east of the citadel after recent government advances, abandoned it by Wednesday morning, retreating to territory they still hold further south.
In a separate development, Syrian state news agency Sana reported that several Israeli missiles struck the Mazzeh military air base outside the capital Damascus overnight, causing a fire but no casualties.
'Great danger'
The SOHR said remaining rebel-held areas in the south-east of the city came under heavy artillery fire overnight.
At least 15 people were killed in government bombardments on Tuesday. it added.
Tens of thousands of civilians are still trapped in the last of the rebel-held districts.
The BBC's Lyse Doucet in Aleppo says officials there are preparing for another exodus, as families try to flee under fire in an extremely dire situation.
A statement by the rebel Aleppo Leadership Council said civilians were in great danger, and it would support any initiative to ease their suffering.
"Civilians should be either protected or evacuated to a safe area where they will not be under the mercy of Assad and his henchmen," it said.
It proposed:
- An immediate five-day humanitarian ceasefire
- Evacuation of about 500 cases requiring emergency treatment under UN supervision
- Evacuation of civilians to the northern Aleppo countryside
- Negotiations on the future of the city
Food supplies are exhausted in eastern Aleppo and there are no functioning hospitals after months of heavy bombardment.
However, the Syrian government has ruled out any further truces in Aleppo, and Russia and China on Monday vetoed a UN Security Council resolution on a week-long ceasefire.
In a conference call on Wednesday, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov described all the remaining rebels in eastern Aleppo as "terrorists," saying that they had united around the jihadist group formerly known as al-Nusra Front.
Meanwhile the Russian defence ministry reported that a Russian military adviser in Syria had been killed by rebel artillery fire.
Col Ruslan Galitsky died of his wounds several days after the attack, on a residential area of government-held western Aleppo, it said.
- Syria rebels set up camp for IS defectors
- How Moscow’s Syria campaign has paid off for Putin
- Why are Aleppo's children so badly affected?
- US unease over joint air action with Russia
- Aleppo remains thorn in government's side
- Aleppo: Syria's key battleground
- How will the new Syria truce work?
- What's left of Syria after five years of war?
- Behind the scenes at the Syria talks
- Syria's refugee exodus
- What has happened to al-Qaeda?
- Syria peace talks and polls signal Assad's growing confidence
- Syria: The view from Golan Heights
- Why is there a war in Syria?
- What's a 'cessation of hostilities'?
- Syria: A different country after five years of war
- How do Syrian children explain the war?
- Is Syria's 'truce' worth the paper it's printed on?
- Syria war: Tide turns Assad's way
- How Putin is succeeding in Syria
- Syria conflict at 'hinge moment'
- Civilians under siege in Syria
- Syria crisis: Where key countries stand
- Islamic State and the crisis in Iraq and Syria in maps
- Syria's war: Special report
No comments:
Post a Comment