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WAR REPORT
Half of rebel Aleppo falls to Syrian forces
By Karam al-Masri with Rana Moussaoui in Beirut
Aleppo, Syria (AFP) Dec 2, 2016


Denmark to withdraw F-16 jets from anti-IS mission
Copenhagen (AFP) Dec 2, 2016 - Denmark said on Friday it would not extend a six-month mission for seven F-16 jets taking part in a US-led coalition focused on attacking Islamic State group targets in Syria and Iraq.

The decision came three days after the Pentagon said a September air strike in Syria by American, Australian, British and Danish planes -- that reportedly killed some 90 regime forces, instead of IS fighters -- was caused by a string of miscommunications, intelligence shortcomings and human errors.

"We have decided to withdraw the Danish fighter jets as planned," Danish Foreign Minister Anders Samuelsen told journalists after a meeting with parliament's Foreign Policy Committee.

"Instead of extending the mission we are sending an additional 20 to 21 troops," he said.

Defence Minister Claus Hjort Frederiksen said the new troops would bring engineering and construction skills to the operation.

"They will train Iraqi forces in, among other things, de-mining operations and will help our current contribution within training," he said in a statement.

In the second half of this year, Denmark has provided the coalition with seven F-16 warplanes -- four of them operational at any one time -- a C-130J transport aircraft and 400 military personnel, including 60 special forces troops.

The transport aircraft would also be withdrawn from the operation, the government said.

Denmark had seven F-16s in Iraq between October 2014 and October 2015, and in April this year lawmakers voted to expand its fight against IS into Syria.

Syrian government forces have recaptured half the former rebel stronghold of east Aleppo, a monitor said Friday, in an offensive that has left bodies in the streets and sparked global outrage.

Rebels put up fierce resistance in the southeastern outskirts of the battered city, but government forces closed in on opposition territory from the east.

President Bashar al-Assad's forces have made swift gains since their offensive against Aleppo -- once Syria's commercial powerhouse -- began on November 15.

Tens of thousands of civilians have streamed out of the city's east, and Russia has renewed calls for humanitarian corridors so aid can enter and desperate residents can leave.

Regime forces Friday "consolidated their control" over two eastern districts and were pushing further to squeeze the shrinking rebel enclave, said Syrian Observatory for Human Rights head Rami Abdel Rahman.

"After the recent advances, the regime is comfortably in control of half of former rebel territory in the city's east," he said.

The loss of east Aleppo -- a rebel stronghold since 2012 -- would be the biggest blow to Syria's opposition in more than five years.

Earlier Friday, anti-government fighters had successfully rolled back regime gains in Sheikh Saeed on Aleppo's southeastern outskirts.

Sheikh Saeed borders the last remaining parts of Aleppo still in rebel hands -- a collection of densely populated residential neighbourhoods where thousands have sought refuge from advancing regime forces.

In preparation for street-by-street fighting in these districts, hundreds of fighters from Syria's elite Republican Guard and Fourth Division arrived in Aleppo Friday, the Britain-based Observatory said.

- Rocket fire, clashes -

It said four civilians were killed in rebel rocket fire on government-held areas, bringing to 59 the civilian toll in the city's west.

More than 300 civilians, including dozens of children, have been killed in east Aleppo since the offensive began, according to the Observatory.

Intermittent clashes rocked residential buildings on Aleppo's eastern edges Friday, as regime forces sought to secure the road towards the airport.

AFP's correspondent in east Aleppo said ferocious clashes could be heard in the Tariq al-Bab district, where regime forces advanced Thursday.

Civilians had already totally emptied the adjacent neighbourhood of Al-Shaar, where a few rebels manned positions in front of shuttered shops and bakeries.

Vegetable stalls -- empty for months because of a devastating government siege -- now lay shattered by heavy artillery fire.

The escalating violence has been met with international outrage, including a UN warning that east Aleppo could become "a giant graveyard".

Moscow has proposed setting up four humanitarian corridors into east Aleppo.

"We have informed the UN in New York and Geneva that there is no longer a problem with the delivery of humanitarian cargo to eastern Aleppo," Russia's Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said.

He said the UN was coming up with a plan and approval from Syrian authorities remained essential.

Moscow has announced several humanitarian pauses in Aleppo to allow civilians to flee, but until the recent escalation, only a handful did so.

East Aleppo residents have been wary of previous such offers because of Russia's support for Assad, including a bombing campaign backing his forces since September 2015.

The defence ministry in Moscow said Russian deminers had been sent to help clear mines from east Aleppo districts taken from the rebels.

- 'Race against time' -

Dozens of families trickled out Friday, adding to the more than 50,000 people who have poured from east Aleppo into territory controlled by government forces or local Kurdish authorities, the Observatory said.

Among those fleeing are nearly 20,000 children, according to estimates by the UN's children's agency.

"What is critical now is that we provide the immediate and sustained assistance that these children and their families desperately need," UNICEF spokesman Christophe Boulierac said.

"It's a race against time, as winter is here and conditions are basic."

In Beirut Thursday, German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier pledged 50 million euros ($53 million) to organisations serving the "suffering population" of Aleppo.

"What we must achieve is an agreement on breaks in the fighting, hopefully leading to a ceasefire so those who are suffering so horribly can finally have their basic needs met," Steinmeier said.

The conflict erupted in March 2011 with protests calling for Assad's ouster, and has since evolved into a highly globalised war that has killed more than 300,000 people.

Also Friday, around 2,000 people including rebels and their families quit an opposition-held town north of Damascus under a deal with the government.

The evacuation of Al-Tal was the sixth such operation in three months.


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