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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Syrian rebels advance towards key airport in Hama province
2014-07-30
Syrian rebels pressed on with a fresh advance in the central province of Hama, as they bid to take out its military airport, a rebel commander and a monitor said on Tuesday.

“The rebels are now nine kilometres away from Hama military airport, which they want to put out of action,” said Syrian Observatory for Human Rights director Rami Abdel Rahman.

A rebel leader in the area, who gave his name as Hassan, said Hama military airport was important because “that is where the regime makes its barrel bombs, and warplanes take off from there to carry out air strikes on (opposition-held) areas across Syria”.

According to the Observatory, rebels and their Al Qaeda ally, the Al Nusra Front, took over a major checkpoint north of Hama city, which is firmly under regime control, on Monday night. The takeover of the checkpoint at Tarabih comes on the back of Sunday’s capture of a weapons depot in the area.

“The regime has suffered several defeats in Hama province in recent days,” said Abdel Rahman.

As they have advanced, rebels have cut off the road linking Hama city, the provincial capital, to a string of regime-controlled Christian and Alawi villages in the west of the province, he added.

According to Hassan, the regime is sending reinforcements.

“They are stepping up their troop presence here, which will limit the regime’s capabilities in other areas, such as Aleppo,” said the rebel commander, who spoke via the Internet. As for the military airport: “We are already striking it with Grad missiles,” said Hassan.

In Aleppo alone, air strikes including barrel bomb attacks have since December killed hundreds of civilians including children, and forced thousands of families to flee, as the regime has unleashed a massive aerial offensive there.

Rights groups have hit out at the regime for its use of barrel bombs, which they describe as failing to discriminate between civilian and military targets.
Dumb bombs, whether made from barrels or fromthe finest casings, can't discriminate between civilians and military targets. That's the job of the pilot...
Posted by:Steve White

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