Terrorist groups have taken over some of Syria’s largest cities as Assad’s office claims the president is still in the capital
Jihadist groups in Syria have reached the suburbs of Damascus as part of a rapidly progressing offensive that has overrun some of Syria’s largest cities, Associated Press wrote on Saturday, quoting opposition leaders and an Islamist commander.
At the same time, the Syrian presidency has refuted rumors stating that President Bashar Assad has left Damascus, adding that false reports of his departure from the Syrian capital have been spread by foreign outlets in an attempt to “mislead and influence” the country’s population.
With Hayat Tahrir-al-Sham (HTS) jihadists and other anti-government forces moving south from Aleppo and Idlib provinces over the last week, the Syrian Army has repeatedly withdrawn from key strongholds – including Aleppo, Hama, and several towns north of Homs – in a bid to re-establish defensive lines and hold back the advancing terrorists.
According to Associated Press, terrorist elements apparently broke through these lines and reached the outskirts of Damascus on Saturday, marking the first time since 2015 that jihadists have encroached on the capital.
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Terrorists roll into key Syrian city (VIDEO)
Amid HTS’ lightning-fast advance, the office of the Syrian Presidency announced on Saturday that “some foreign media outlets are spreading rumors and false news about President Bashar al-Assad leaving Damascus, or making quick visits to one country or another.”
“The Presidency of the Syrian Arab Republic denies all these rumors and points out their blatant goals and confirms that they are not new, but rather these outlets have previously followed this pattern of attempts to mislead and influence the Syrian state and society throughout the past years of the war,” the statement continued.
Assad is still carrying out his “national and constitutional duties from the capital, Damascus,” it concluded.
In an anonymously-sourced report on Friday, the Telegraph claimed that Assad’s family had fled to Russia, and that it was “unclear” whether the president himself would remain in Syria. Multiple Western outlets have claimed that Egypt and Jordan are urging Assad to flee the country and set up a government in exile.
Led by a former Al-Qaeda commander and previously known as Jabhat al-Nusra, HTS was one of a multitude of factions opposing Assad’s government during the Syrian Civil War.
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Russian-Syrian airstrikes kill dozens of terrorists – media
Russia intervened in the conflict in 2015, helping Assad retake much of the country from Jabhat al-Nusra, Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS), and dozens of US-supported armed groups termed “moderate rebels” by Washington. The US directly intervened against IS, but armed and funded other anti-Assad forces during the decade-long conflict.
Assad has vowed to “eliminate” the jihadists currently rampaging through central Syria, and to punish their “sponsors and supporters.” Russian and Syrian warplanes have carried out near-constant airstrikes against HTS positions since the terrorist offensive began last week, reportedly killing dozens of militants north of Homs on Saturday.
According to Syrian media reports, Syrian and Russian forces have killed around 2,500 jihadists since the beginning of December.
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