Beirut: Syrian rebels, including radical Islamists, seized the last government-held town on the main highway between second city Aleppo and the city of Hama to its south on Thursday, a monitoring group said.
The blow to the Damascus regime came just a day after it recaptured from Daesh forces an alternative route further east that had provided its sole link to neighbourhoods of Aleppo under its control.
Islamist faction “Jund Al Aqsa and opposition groups have seized full control of the town of Morek after a fierce offensive,” the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.
The Britain-based watchdog’s director Rami Abdul Rahman said that clashes were still raging in the south and east of the town, and that “dozens” of soldiers had been killed or wounded.
Jund Al Aqsa boasted of victory on its Twitter account, but a Syrian security source denied any major setback.
“There are clashes around Morek and there is some infiltration, but the fighting is ongoing and we are dealing with the situation,” he said.
Morek has changed hands several times in Syria’s four-year civil war. Government troops last retook it in October 2014.
Last month, Syrian troops launched a major fightback in Hama province with Russian air support, with the main Aleppo highway a principal objective.
It was one of a number of counter-offensives the Damascus regime has launched since Moscow intervened in its support on September 30.
But they have faced fierce resistance, particularly in Hama.
“Instead of gaining ground, the regime has lost territory,” Abdel Rahman said.
On Wednesday, the Syrian army recaptured the alternative route it was using to reach the government-held western sector of Aleppo city, relieving tens of thousands of stranded civilians.
Advancing Daesh forces had severed the road late last month.
There are several rival militant groups fighting in Syria.
As well as Daesh, there is Al Qaida affiliate Al-Nusra Front, with which it has frequently fought.
There is also Jund Al Aqsa, which last month withdrew from the Army of Conquest alliance of Al Nusra and Islamist factions, which controls Idlib province in the northwest and parts of neighbouring Hama and Latakia.
In a statement posted on its Twitter account, the group said the Army of Conquest was not dedicated enough to establishing a Syria ruled by Sharia.
—AFP
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