Pro-government forces intensified their assault on the rebel-held suburbs of the Syrian capital, activists said today, a day after rebels beat back an attempted government advance, killing several soldiers.
The fighting threw into sharp relief the fragility of a so-called "cease-fire" that was supposed to bring calm to the besieged enclave inhabited by some 400,000 people.
Opposition media activist Anas al-Dimashqi said government air raids and artillery fire have reached a rate of 60 to 70 strikes per day on areas held by the Faylaq al-Rahman rebel faction, which was not party to the cease-fire brokered by Egypt and Russia and signed in Cairo on July 22.
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But mortars also fell on Douma, al-Rayhan and Housh al- Douahira, towns and villages held by the Islam Army faction, which is party to the cease-fire, according to al-Dimashqi and the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitoring group.
The Observatory said rebels killed nine soldiers and captured at least one fighting for the Syrian army's vaunted 4th Division, in battle yesterday. It said the bombardment continued today.
"What kind of cease-fire is this?" said Observatory director Rami Abdurrahman. "I don't consider this a cease- fire."
For its part, Faylaq al-Rahman said it came under attack by the Islam Army over the weekend, it said in a statement today.
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