Hasakeh / AFP
Kurdish fighters advanced in the flashpoint city of Hasakeh in northeast Syria after a Russian mediation bid failed to halt clashes with pro-regime forces, a monitoring group said on Sunday.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights and a military source said the Kurds seized territory across several neighbourhoods in the city’s south in violent clashes on Saturday night. The Britain-based Observatory said Kurds advanced in Zuhur, while a Kurdish military source said that they pushed forward in Al-Nashwa and Ghweiran. A local journalist working for AFP said he saw members of the pro-government National Defence Forces militia retreating from Al-Nashwa.
Regime aircraft flew over the city early Sunday morning, most of which is under Kurdish control, but without carrying out any bombing raids, the Observatory said.
In an escalation of Syria’s five-year war, regime planes on Wednesday bombarded positions held by US-backed Kurdish forces in the city fighting the IS extremist group. The unprecedented strikes prompted the US-led coalition to scramble aircraft to protect its special operations forces helping the Kurdish fighters. Fighting between a pro-government militia and Kurdish forces since Wednesday has left at least 43 people dead including 27 civilians, among them 11 children, according to the Observatory.
Thousands of civilians have fled the city.
Al-Masdar News, a pro-regime website, said renewed clashes broke out Saturday after the failure of mediation efforts in the neighbouring city of Qamishli by a Russian military delegation.