Islamists advance in fierce clashes for Syria's Idlib
Islamist rebels made fresh advances Friday on the edges of Idlib city in northwest Syria, after fierce clashes that have left dozens of dead, an activist group says, AFP reports.
"The fighters have advanced on the northwestern and southeastern sides of the city," said Rami Abdel Rahman, head of the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.
"There are very violent clashes, and last night 26 militants and four regime soldiers were killed," he told AFP.
An activist from the area said civilians were trapped in their homes.
"The humanitarian situation is very difficult. There are refugees from other parts of the country who are in Idlib," said Ibrahim al-Idlibi.
On Tuesday, a new coalition of Islamist rebels launched a coordinated attack against Idlib city, which is held by government forces.
Calling itself "The Army of Conquest," the coalition is led by Al-Qaeda affiliate the Al-Nusra Front and includes several other Islamist groups.
The rebels have advanced using "street fighting," taking control of the city's edges, neighborhood by neighborhood, said another activist, Khaled Hanoun, who is in contact with rebels in Idlib.