The
destruction of Aleppo's ancient bazzaars is a tragedy
Fight
for Aleppo rages as bazaars burn
Forces
loyal to President Bashar al-Assad have shelled rebel-held areas
across Syria as fierce clashes were reported in the second city of
Aleppo where a fire tore through a medieval marketplace.
1
October, 2012
The
fighting in Aleppo city was accompanied by intense overnight shelling
that continued into Sunday morning, destroying houses and killing at
least three people, including two civilians, said the Syrian
Observatory for Human Rights.
Aleppo,
Syria's most populous city, has been the main battleground for the
past two months of the country's 18-month conflict, and has been
gripped by fighting on an unprecedented scale in recent days.
Much
of the violence has centred in and around the Old City, where a fire
in the centuries-old souk marketplace destroyed many shops, according
to an AFP correspondent and the observatory.
Clashes
were reported elsewhere in the northern province of Aleppo, where
rebel mortar fire damaged two helicopters at the Al-Nairab military
airport, said the Britain-based observatory, which relies on a
network of activists on the ground.
In
Damascus province, rebels killed nine soldiers when they attacked a
military checkpoint on the road linking the capital with Qatana to
the southwest, the group reported.
That
came after soldiers backed by aerial firepower stormed the rebel
stronghold of Harasta as regime forces carried out arrest raids in
the town of Zabadani.
Elsewhere,
troops trying to dislodge rebels fired heavy artillery into areas of
the southern province of Daraa, central region of Hama and Idlib in
the country's northwest, said the Observatory.
In
the northeastern province of Hasakeh, the army fired on several
houses, injuring several people, as security forces conducted arrest
operations in the coastal city of Banias, it added.
UN
spokesman Khaled al-Masri told AFP that Mokhtar Lamani, the head of
UN-Arab League peace envoy Lakhdar Brahimi's office in Syria, met a
commander of the rebel Free Syrian Army in a central part of the
country.
Lamani
held talks with Colonel Kassem Saadeddine in the town of Talbisseh,
Homs province, and other members of the FSA, which is made up of army
deserters and civilians who have taken up arms against the al-Assad
regime.
The
official also met the governor of Homs province, Ghassan Abdelaal, as
well as representatives of the International Committee of the Red
Cross and Syrian Red Crescent.
Separately,
Iraq's Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari vowed to stop and search any
flights from top Damascus ally Iran over its territory suspected of
carrying weapons to Syria.
"We
have assured US officials that the Iraqi government is determined to
land (Iranian) flights and carry out random searches," Zebari
told Arabic daily Al-Hayat.
Last
week, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton pushed Baghdad to deliver
on pledges to stop such flights during a meeting with Iraqi
Vice-President Kudayr al-Khuzaie.
Zebari
said the flights first started in March and were stopped after the
Iraqis called on the Iranians to do so. By late July, however, the
flights had resumed.
"They
(the Iranians) said they were not carrying weapons or ammunition but
pilgrims, visitors and other things," said Zebari, adding that
"just to be sure, we will land these planes".
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