Sunday, 24 January 2016

Key town’s fall major blow to Syrian fighters

BEIRUT: Syrian regime forces on Sunday overran the last major rebel-held town in the coastal Latakia province, a stronghold of President Bashar Assad, state television reported.
Citing a military source, state television said Syria’s “armed forces, in coordination with the popular defense (militia), seized control of the town of Rabia.”
The town had been held by the opposition since 2012 and was controlled by a range of rebel groups including some made up of Syrian Turkmen, as well as Al-Qaeda affiliate Al-Nusra Front.
According to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, Rabia fell on Sunday after a steady regime advance that left the town surrounded.
“In the past 48 hours, regime forces surrounded the town from three sides — the south, west, and north — by capturing 20 villages,” Observatory head Rami Abdel Rahman told AFP.
Abdel Rahman said senior Russian military officials were overseeing the battle for Rabia, and that Russian airstrikes “played an essential role” in the fight.
With the capture of Rabia, government troops are closing in on rebel supply routes through the Turkish border to the north, he added.
Rabia’s fall comes after government troops seized the strategic town of Salma on January 12, following months of operations to capture it from rebels who had held it since 2012.

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