1.1253077-3769360322
Free Syrian Army fighters drag a body of a fellow fighter after he was killed by what the FSA said was during clashes with forces loyal to Syria's President Bashar al-Assad near Base 80 near Aleppo International airport, November 8, 2013. Forces loyal to al-Assad backed by a dawn barrage of artillery fire and airstrikes drove Syrian rebels from a strategic military base near the disputed northern city of Aleppo on Friday, a local photographer said. The advance into Base 80, a large military position which rebels have held since February, will help Assad's forces move towards rebel-held areas of Aleppo city and follows a string of successful offensives this month. Image Credit: REUTERS

Beirut: Syrian rebels have regained control of a strategic base near Aleppo international airport in fierce fighting that left more than 50 people dead, a monitoring group said on Saturday.

Troops backed by fighters from Lebanese Shiite militant group Hezbollah had recaptured large parts of Base 80 outside Syria’s main northern city in an assault on Friday morning.

But rebel fighters, among them Al Qaida loyalists, counter-attacked after dark, using Grad rockets against the army’s tanks and recovering all of the lost ground, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.

“As a result of the fighting, the rebels and jihadists have retaken the parts of the base that were captured during the day by the army,” the watchdog’s director Rami Abdul Rahman said.

He said the fighting had left at least 53 people dead, 33 on the rebel side and 20 on the government side.

The rebels seized Base 80, which provided the garrison for both Aleppo international airport and the adjacent Nayrab military airfield, in February.

They failed to capture either airport but civilian flights have been suspended since the start of the year because of rebel fire.

The army has made several advances east of of Aleppo in recent days, including the recapture of Sfeira, a town that had been under rebel control for a year.

More than 120,000 people have been killed in Syria since the conflict erupted in March 2011, according to the Observatory’s figures.

Millions more have been displaced inside Syria or have fled abroad.