Syrian rebels have killed 20 fighters loyal to Bashar al-Assad near the Shiite village of al-Fu’aa in Idlib province, as rebels succeeded to cut the supply route of regime forces and its allied militias in Idlib by controlling ‘Sabah Qatiea’ checkpoint, rebel commoner told Zaman al-Wasl that
Ahmed al-Ahmed, commandr in ash-Sham Legion, said rebels had founded 6 corpses belong to one family (Father, Mother
and four children) were taken hostages by regime forces.
An alliance of Syrian Islamist
rebels including al Qaeda's Nusra Front have overrun 17 defense posts around
Idlib in an offensive to take the city from the army and allied militia, Reuters
said on Thursday.
Idlib, which is close to the main strategic highway linking Damascus to Aleppo, is the capital of a northwestern province of the same name. The army controls the city of at least 100,000 people and rebels are stationed on the outskirts.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which tracks the violence from Britain, said the Nusra Front, the powerful Ahrar al-Sham movement and the hardline Jund al-Aqsa were advancing, taking a total of 17 army posts on the outskirts.
Syria's state news agency said on Thursday that government forces had "targeted terrorist gatherings in the surroundings of Idlib city". It said dozens of insurgents were killed and 11 vehicles were destroyed.
State television said the army foiled an attempt by terrorists to enter the city, citing a military source.
The grouping of Islamist brigades have called the operation Army of Fatah, a reference to the Muslim conquests that spread the faith through the Middle East starting in the seventh century.
The Islamic Front, an alliance involved in the operation, posted videos on YouTube of battlefield developments on Thursday. It showed insurgents in camouflage running through olive groves.
The Islamic Front's Twitter account said that a top military leader in Ahrar al-Sham had been killed during the offensive. Islamic State, the most powerful anti-government militia, was not involved in the clashes.
Syria slid into civil war after a crackdown on peaceful protests against President Bashar al-Assad in March 2011. The United Nations says more than 220,000 people have been killed. (With Reuters)
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