1.1942800-482626158
People who fled eastern districts of Aleppo stand with their belongings in a government-held area of the city yesterday. Syria’s army has recaptured 85 per cent of the city’s eastern parts. Image Credit: Reuters

Aleppo: Syrian government artillery pummelled fast-shrinking rebel territory in Aleppo on Friday as key regime backer Russia vowed not to end the bombardment till opposition fighters remain in the battleground city.

The United Nations voiced concern at allegations that hundreds of men had disappeared after fleeing to government-held areas, and said opposition groups were reportedly blocking others from leaving east Aleppo.

Retreating rebels now control only a pocket of Syria’s second city, whose fate is seen as pivotal to the outcome of a nearly six-year-old war that has killed more than 300,000 people.

The boom of artillery was heard through the night and on Friday in the opposition-held enclave, an AFP correspondent reported.

Air strikes on east Aleppo halted on Thursday evening following Moscow’s announcement of a “humanitarian pause” but heavy shelling continued into the morning, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.

More than 400 civilians, including 45 children, have been killed in east Aleppo since the latest offensive began on November 15, according to the British-based monitor which has a network of sources on the ground.

Rebel fire into the government-controlled west is reported to have killed more than 100 people, including 35 children.

After talks with US Secretary of State John Kerry in Hamburg on Thursday, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov announced a pause in the army’s assault to allow for the evacuation of thousands of civilians.

But Lavrov said Friday: “After a humanitarian pause, (the strikes) have resumed and will continue for as long as the bandits are still in Aleppo.”

The UN General Assembly was to vote Friday on a draft resolution demanding an immediate ceasefire and access for humanitarian aid, although the British ambassador described the measure as “too little, too late”.

UN envoy Staffan de Mistura briefed the Security Council on Thursday ahead of talks in Geneva on Saturday between the United States and Russia on a possible deal that would allow civilians and rebel fighters to leave Aleppo.

Syria’s army, backed by Iranian fighters and the Lebanese Shiite militant group Hezbollah, has recaptured 85 per cent of the eastern parts of Aleppo that the rebels had held since mid-2012.

The United Nations says that up to 500 sick and injured children desperately need to be evacuated, and on Friday said it had reports of rebels preventing evacuations but also government arrests of those who had managed to flee.

“Some of the civilians who are attempting to flee are reportedly being blocked by armed opposition groups,” a spokesman for the UN human rights office, Rupert Colville, told reporters in Geneva.

He added: “While it’s very difficult to establish the facts in such a fluid and dangerous situation, we have received very worrying allegations that hundreds of men have gone missing after crossing into government-controlled areas.”