Fierce fighting in Damascus suburbs as army defectors grow bolder

The Syrian military launched an offensive to regain control of suburbs on the eastern edge of Damascus yesterday, storming neighbourhoods and clashing with groups of army defectors in fierce fighting that killed at least 12 people, activists said.

Violence elsewhere in the country killed at least 17 more people, including six soldiers in a roadside bombing south of the capital. But the heaviest fighting was focused in a belt of suburbs and villages on the eastern outskirts of Damascus, where government troops reinforced by dozens of tanks and armoured vehicles battled with armed defectors who have grown increasingly bold, staking out positions and setting up checkpoints in recent days.

Some of the fighting was only two miles from Damascus, in Ein Tarma, making it the closest yet to the capital as President Bashar Assad’s regime pushes to uproot protesters and dissident soldiers who have joined the opposition.

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The ten-month uprising against Assad, which began with largely peaceful demonstrations, has grown increasingly militarised recently as more frustrated protesters and army defectors have taken up arms against the regime.

Although the tightly controlled capital has been relatively quiet since the uprising began, its outskirts have witnessed intense anti-regime protests and army defectors have become more visible and active in the past few months.

The military has responded with a withering assault on a string of Damascus suburbs in a bid to stamp out the resistance, leading to a spike in violence that has killed nearly 100 people since Thursday.

The rising bloodshed has added urgency to new attempts by Arab and Western countries to find a resolution to the 10 months of violence, which according to the United Nations has killed at least 5,400 people as Assad seeks to crush persistent protests demanding an end to his rule.

The UN is holding talks on a new resolution on Syria and will discuss an Arab League peace plan aimed at ending the crisis.

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