(Reuters) -
Syrian troops have broken a year-long rebel siege on Aleppo's main
prison after heavy fighting with al Qaeda fighters and other Islamist
brigades, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitoring group said
on Thursday. It said forces loyal to President Bashar al-Assad entered the prison compound in military vehicles and gunfire was heard. Syrian
state media did not report on the fighting around the prison on
Thursday, but earlier said Assad's forces had captured the town of
Hailan next to the prison, about 5 miles northeast of Aleppo city. Assad's
forces and rebels have been fighting for two years in Aleppo, Syria's
largest city before the start of the three-year civil war, and the
countryside around it. Rebels,
including fighters from al Qaeda's Nusra Front, have tried repeatedly
to storm the prison and free its inmates, bombing and breaching its
outer walls but failing to take full control. The complex holds around
3,000 prisoners. The
recapture of the prison and its surroundings means that Assad's forces
have control over the north-east approach to Aleppo, the Observatory's
Rami Abdulrahman said. The Britain-based, anti-Assad Observatory, which monitors the violence in Syria
through a network of activists and medical and military sources, says
more than 162,000 people have been killed in the conflict, which grew
out of protests against Assad's rule.
Assad's forces enter Syria's Aleppo prison - monitor

Reuters
Comments About This Article
Please fill the fields below.