Israel defense forces and their counterpart of Turkey have continue to either destroyed or takeover different towns and cities of Syria.
Multiple source in the middle-east confirmed that Israel has been busy attacking military installations and arm production companies with a claim to weekends rebels including Islamic States best known as IS.
The SOHR war monitor reported that at least two Syrian civilians have been killed in the Israeli onslaught.
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Moreover, many explosions were heard in Syrian capital Damascus as Israel’s military continued to pound it after launching what Israeli media called “one of the biggest air attacks” in the Israeli air force’s history.
An Israeli security source told the Israeli Army Radio that Israel’s military attacked more than 250 targets in Syria in what he described as “one of the largest attack operations in the history” of the country’s air force.
Meanwhile, In northeast Syria, the Turkiye-backed Syrian National Army (SNA) is pressing on with an offensive to seize territory from the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), who are supported by the US.
The city is located some 30km (19 miles) south of the Turkish border and was the YPG’s largest stronghold west of the Euphrates River.
Its fall comes days after the SNA launched what it calls “Operation Dawn of Freedom” to capture territory that the YPG had seized in recent years.
The YPG, which leads the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), governs vast areas in northern and eastern Syria, including vital oil fields and areas hosting some 900 US troops.
In another development, the United Nation’s refugee agency (UNHCR) says between 800,000 and one million people have been displaced inside Syria since the opposition forces launched their offensive to topple al-Assad.
This number includes 150,000 “experiencing secondary displacement”, it said.
Women and girls comprise nearly half of the figure, it reported.
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“The security situation in Aleppo, Idlib, Hama, Homs and Damascus remains dynamic. There are multiple overlapping population movements, including major internal displacement within Syria, some IDPs returning home, movements out of Syria, and relatively small numbers of refugee returns,” it said.
The agency noted that more than 13 million Syrians have fled their homes over the country’s 14-year war, while 90 percent of the people there require some form of humanitarian assistance.
Source: Aljazeera and News agencies