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WAR REPORT
Syria missile kills 29, regime gains in Homs: NGO
by Staff Writers
Damascus (AFP) July 27, 2013


Ban to review Syria chemical arms accord
United Nations, United States / United States (AFP) July 27, 2013 - UN leader Ban Ki-moon will review an accord struck with Syria on investigating the use of chemical weapons before any details are announced, a spokeswoman said Saturday.

Ban will meet in New York Monday with one of the two envoys who struck the accord, United Nations spokeswoman Morana Song told AFP.

The UN and the Syrian government said in a joint statement late Friday that agreement had been reached "on the way forward" in the probe, following a visit to Damascus by Ake Sellstrom, head of the UN inspectors, and Angela Kane, the UN disarmament envoy.

The statement did not say whether UN inspectors would be allowed into Syria as Ban has demanded.

Kane is to report on the visit to the secretary general on Monday, Song said.

"We will have no further comment until the secretary general has had an opportunity to get briefed on the visit and review the situation," she added.

Kane and Sellstrom were in Damascus on Wednesday and Thursday. They met with Foreign Minister Walid al-Muallem and Deputy Prime Minister Qadri Jamil, the joint statement said.

"The discussions were thorough and productive and led to an agreement on the way forward," it added, without giving further details.

The UN says it has been given reports of 13 chemical weapons attacks during the 28-month-old conflict that has claimed more than 100,000 lives.

The United States and other countries say they believe sarin and other banned chemicals have been use in "limited" quantities.

Ban has demanded widespread access to investigate all allegations. Syria, however, has insisted the UN only probe its claim that opposition rebels used chemical weapons in the town of Khan al-Assal on March 19.

Britain, France and the United States say all the attacks were carried out by President Bashar al-Assad's forces. But Russia, Assad's main ally, says its inquiry found opposition rebels used sarin gas in Khan al-Assal.

Aleppo missile toll hits 29 dead, mostly children: NGO
Beirut (AFP) July 27, 2013 - At least 29 people, including 19 children, died in a missile strike by regime forces on the northern Syrian city of Aleppo, a watchdog said Saturday, revising an earlier toll.

"At least 29 people, including 19 children and four women, were killed in Aleppo's Bab Nairab neighbourhood in a surface-to-surface missile strike by regime forces" on Friday, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.

The Britain-based watchdog, which relies on a wide network of medics and activists on the ground, had earlier given a toll of 18 dead, including three children.

A militant group said the toll could rise as rescue operations were still underway on Saturday.

The Observatory said the army was aiming at rebel headquarters, including a base of the jihadist Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIS), in Bab Nairab, in the south of Aleppo city.

"But the missile fell dozens of metres (yards) away," the Observatory said.

An earlier report suggested that more than one missile had been fired.

"My whole family was wiped out, my whole family," a boy in tears said near the rubble of his home, in a video posted by the Observatory.

The militant Syrian Revolution General Commission said in a statement that the death toll could rise as rescuers were still trying to pull people from under the rubble.

At least 29 people, mostly children, died in a regime missile strike on the Syrian city of Aleppo, a watchdog said Saturday, as Hezbollah-backed regime forces advanced in flashpoint Homs.

Nineteen children were among the 29 killed in the northern city's Bab Nairab neighbourhood "in a surface-to-surface missile strike by regime forces" on Friday, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.

The Britain-based monitoring group relies on a wide network of medics and activists on the ground.

A militant group said the toll could rise as rescue operations were still underway on Saturday.

The Observatory said the army was targeting rebel headquarters, including a base of the jihadist Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIS), in Bab Nairab. "But the missile fell dozens of metres (yards) away," it said.

"My whole family was wiped out, my whole family," a boy in tears said near the rubble of his home, in a video posted by the Observatory.

On the battlefield in central Syria, Hezbollah-backed regime forces gained ground in the Khaldiyeh district in Homs after ousting rebels in fierce clashes in the flashpoint city, the Observatory said.

Regime forces now control "60 percent of Khaldiyeh," the Observatory said, and also captured the Khaled bin Walid mosque.

State television quoted a military source as saying that regime forces were in control of all the area around the mosque.

Observatory chief Rami Abdel Rahman told AFP of "continuous heavy mortar and artillery fire" overnight Friday and that the Khaldiyeh district was still being pounded.

Rebels were putting up "fierce resistance" amid "very intense clashes".

Militant network the Syrian Revolution General Commission (SRGC) also reported heavy fighting in the district, which has been besieged by regime forces for more than a year.

"Khaldiyeh is being targeted by an uninterrupted heavy bombardment, and on the ground there is fierce fighting between (rebel) Free Syrian Army fighters and regime forces backed by Lebanon's Hezbollah trying to take the district," a statement said.

Syria's official press said the army was now back in control of most of Khaldiyeh, while an activist on the ground told AFP that the sector was being shelled "day and night".

The SRGC and the Observatory both said the Old City district of Homs -- dubbed the "capital of the revolution" against President Bashar al-Assad -- was being pummelled too.

The latest regime offensive on besieged rebel-held neighbourhoods of Homs is now in its fourth week.

Government forces are seeking to secure another victory like the one in Qusayr near the border with Lebanon in June, when the Shiite militant group Hezbollah was key in retaking the strategic town.

Hezbollah, the strongest military force in Lebanon and a staunch ally of the Assad regime, has had its military wing blacklisted by the European Union as a terrorist group.

The 28-month-old civil war in Syria has killed a total of more than 100,000 people and left million of refugees, without any peace settlement in sight.

In New York, a UN spokeswoman said the world body's chief Ban Ki-moon is to review an accord struck with Syria on investigating the use of chemical weapons before any details are announced.

Ban will meet in New York on Monday with the two envoys who struck the accord, spokeswoman Morana Song told AFP.

The United Nations and Syrian government announced in a joint statement issued late Friday that an accord had been reached "on the way forward" in the investigation, following a Damascus visit this week by two UN envoys.

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