- Syrian forces say they have captured the Khaldiyeh district of Homs, a rebel stronghold since the war began
- But Syrian Observatory
for Human Rights say there is still
scattered fighting in southern areas of the neighborhood
- Syrian
TV aired footage of troops roaming deserted
streets and waving flags in front of shell-scarred buildings
PUBLISHED:
17:29 GMT, 29 July 2013
|
UPDATED:
09:32 GMT, 30 July 2013
House after house, block after block it is a scene of the most appalling devastation.
Not
one building has escaped the onslaught of countless mortars, bombs and
bullets in Syria’s savage civil war. The only signs of life in Homs are
out-of-control weeds. Syria’s third largest city – and the home of
650,000 people before tens of thousands fled or were killed – now looks
as if it has been blasted back to the Stone Age.
The
picture shows the city’s strategic Khalidiya district which troops
loyal to president Bashar al-Assad have just retaken after weeks of
fierce fighting with rebels.
The
counter-offensive, which also saw the government make gains around the
capital Damascus, was supported by Lebanese Hezbollah guerrillas.
At
least 100,000 people have been killed in the Syrian conflict, which
started with peaceful protests against Assad’s rule in March 2011.
Nearly two million refugees have fled.
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Destruction: This aerial view shows the
destruction in the al-Khalidiyah neighbourhood of Homs, which has seen
some of the heaviest fighting as government forces bid to flush rebels
into the open