Heavy Syrian regime bombardment of rebel-held Eastern Ghouta killed at least 18 civilians today, a monitor said, as government forces appeared to prepare for a ground assault.
The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said air strikes battered the town of Hammuriyeh in Eastern Ghouta, leaving nine civilians dead.
Another nine, including a woman, were killed in air raids, artillery fire, and rockets that hit elsewhere in the enclave.
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Held by rebels since 2012, Eastern Ghouta is now the last opposition-controlled pocket around Damascus.
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad has dispatched reinforcements there in recent weeks in an apparent bid to retake the region.
The Observatory and Syrian daily newspaper Al-Watan had said negotiations were under way for the evacuation of jihadists from the enclave.
But government forces ramped up military pressure on Eastern Ghouta starting Sunday, sending more than 260 rockets sailing onto opposition-controlled towns there.
The bombing continued Monday, sending terrified civilians in the enclave searching for cover, AFP's correspondents said.
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