Syrian government forces fought their way into Palmyra on Thursday as the army backed by Russian
air cover sought to recapture the historic city from Islamic State (IS)
insurgents, Syrian state TV and a monitoring group said. The Syrian
army earlier this month launched a concerted offensive to retake
Palmyra, which the ultra-hardline Islamist militants seized in May 2015,
to open a road to the mostly IS-held eastern province of Deir al-Zor. Islamic
State has blown up ancient temples and tombs since capturing Palmyra,
something the U.N. cultural agency UNESCO has called a war crime. The
city, located at a crossroads in central Syria, is surrounded mostly by
desert. The state-run news channel
Ikhbariya broadcast images from just outside Palmyra on Thursday and
said government fighters had taken over a hotel district in the west. The
Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the army had
advanced into the hotel district just to the southwest of the city and
reached the start of a residential area, after a rapid advance the day
before brought the army and its allies right up to its outskirts. A soldier interviewed by Ikhbariya said the army and its allies would press forward beyond Palmyra. "We
say to those gunmen, we are advancing to Palmyra, and to what's beyond
Palmyra, and God willing to Raqqa, the centre of the Daesh gangs," he
said, referring to Islamic State's de facto capital in northern Syria.
The state news
agency SANA showed warplanes flying overhead, helicopters firing
missiles, and soldiers and armoured vehicles approaching Palmyra. Civilians
began fleeing after Islamic State fighters told them via loudspeakers
to leave the centre as fighting drew closer, the Observatory said. The
Observatory monitors the war using a network of sources on the ground. The capture of
Palmyra and advances further eastwards into Deir al-Zor would mark the
most significant Syrian government gain against Islamic State since the
start of Russia's military intervention last September. With
Russia's help, Damascus has already taken back some ground from IS,
notably east of Aleppo, Syria's biggest city and commercial hub before
the war.
Syrian regime forces enter Islamic State-held Palmyra
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