1.1242009-1624742066
Soldiers loyal to Syria’s President Bashar al-Assad pose for a photo with their brides during a mass wedding held in Homs city, in this handout photograph distributed by Syria’s national news agency SANA on October 11, 2013. Image Credit: Reuters

Amman: Syrian army troops and Shiite militia fighters loyal to President Bashar Al Assad captured two southern suburbs of Damascus on Friday, killing at least 70 people, opposition activists said.

The fighters, including some from the Lebanese Shiite movement Hezbollah and Iraqi Shiites backed by Syrian army tanks, searched Al Thiabiya and Hussainiya, a Palestinian refugee camp, for pockets of resistance after overrunning them, the sources said.

The capture of the two districts, located between the two main highways leading to Jordan, strengthens Al Assad’s hold on major supply lines and puts pressure on rebel brigades under siege for months in areas adjacent to the centre of Damascus.

Buoyed by opposition divisions and the receding prospect of US military strikes, Al Assad has tried to tighten his grip on areas in the country’s centre and along the coast and the north-south highways, as well as the capital and its environs - a major area of operations for his foreign Shiite allies.

The two suburbs are near Sayida Zainab, a district where a Shiite shrine is located and which Iran-backed Hezbollah and Iraqi fighters have used as a base to deploy in southern Damascus.

Speaking from the south of the capital, activist Rami Al Syed said 20 out of the 70 people killed on the rebel side were hit by sniper fire as they tried to flee al-Thiabiya through farmland. A rebel commander said 45 Shiite militiamen were killed in the last 24 hours.

Street fighting

Al Syed said three brigades - Ahfad Al Rasoul and Al Umma and Aknaf Al Bayt Al Maqdesi, which is mainly comprised of Palestinian refugees - had repeatedly asked for back-up from better equipped rebels brigades in eastern Damascus.

“They were let down. The loss of these districts is largely due to lack of coordination and the reluctance to assist the defenders,” Al Syed said.

Al Thiabiya and Hussainiya have been hit by multiple rocket launchers for the past week from an army camp situated on the high ground near the area, providing cover for Shi’ite fighters who did most of the street fighting, opposition sources said.

In a last-ditch effort to save the two districts, rebels attacked loyalist forces in Sayida Zainab with mortar bombs and automatic weapons on Thursday, but the counter-offensive failed.

The Iraqi and Lebanese militia backed by Syrian army tanks and fighter jets overran Shaikh Omar, another southern suburb near Sayida Zainab, earlier this week, putting pressure on several Islamist rebel brigades trying to hold onto strategic outskirts of the capital.

The 2-1/2-year war has killed more than 100,000 people and forced millions from their homes into sprawling refugee camps in neighbouring countries.

It began with peaceful demonstrations against four decades of Al Assad family rule. With Shiite Iran and Sunni heavyweight Saudi Arabia backing opposing sides in the conflict and Russia blocking Western efforts to push Assad aside, there is little sign of an end to the bloodshed.

Regional security officials say fighters from Iraq, Iran, Yemen and Hezbollah are in Syria supporting Al Assad, as well as foreign fighters and Syrian expatriates on the rebel side.

The total number of foreign fighters on both sides runs in the tens of thousands, they say.