At least 14 people were killed in army shelling
on a rebel village near the Syrian capital on Tuesday, as violence raged in
flashpoint areas of Damascus and in the central city of Homs, a watchdog said.
The shelling comes a day after a powerful car
bomb rocked the district of Kafr Sousa in southwest Damascus.
The blast killed an unknown number of members of
the security forces, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights,
which said that at least 14 people died in Tuesday's shelling.
"The number of people killed in Kafr Batna
has risen to 14, including three women and three children, after regime troops
shelled" the village, said the Observatory.
Kafr Batna is located in the Eastern Ghouta area
east of Damascus, home to several rebel bastions.
In late spring, the army launched an
unprecedentedly fierce onslaught on the area, aimed at cutting off rebel supply
lines into Damascus.
The army has meanwhile kept up a bid to crush
insurgents already operating in the capital.
On Tuesday, state television said the army has
"restored security and stability in most of Jubar" in eastern
Damascus.
The district has seen heavy fighting in recent
weeks, and according to the Observatory, the army renewed shelling on the
neighbourhood on Tuesday.
Troops also shelled Qaboon in northeastern Damascus
and Barzeh in the north, the group added.
In central Syria, rebels in besieged districts
of Homs city held out, four days into an army assault in which Lebanese Shiite
group Hezbollah is also taking part, said the Observatory.
The army shelled the rebel neighbourhood of
Khaldiyeh while clashes raged in Bab Hud, the Observatory said, adding that an
unknown number of fighters on both sides were wounded.
More than 100,000 people have died in Syria's
raging war, which broke out more than 27 months ago when a peaceful movement
for change morphed into an insurgency after the army unleashed a brutal
crackdown on dissent.
Millions have been displaced as a result of the
war, and poverty has ravaged the country.
Since March 2011, Syria's public sector has registered
losses of $7.5 billion, according to the country's local administration
minister Omar Ghalawanji.
Direct losses due to material damage and other
tangible destruction caused by the conflict accounted for $1.25 billion alone,
Ghalawanji said.
More than 9,000 public buildings have been
"partly or completely destroyed" during the conflict, according to
Syria's Committee for Reconstruction, which was established to evaluate war
damage and calculate compensation.
(With AFP and Alarabiya)
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