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Mortars strike several Damascus areas
AP
Last Updated IST
Ready to strike:  Free Syrian Army fighters prepare their weapons in Sidi Meqdad area in the suburbs of Damascus on  Monday. Reuters  photo
Ready to strike: Free Syrian Army fighters prepare their weapons in Sidi Meqdad area in the suburbs of Damascus on Monday. Reuters photo

Mortars rounds struck several areas of Damascus on Tuesday, killing at least four people, a government official said, while anti-regime activists said Syrian troops seized control of a neighbourhood in the central city of Homs that is considered a symbol of opposition to President Bashar Assad’s regime.

The Syrian military’s recapture of Baba Amr came as opposition representatives took the country’s seat for the first time at an Arab League summit, a significant diplomatic boost for the rebellion. The seesaw fight for the Homs neighbourhood reflects the back-and-forth nature of Syria’s 2-year-old civil war. While rebels appear to be gaining ground, their progress is slow and their fighters remain vulnerable to Assad’s military superiority.

The regime has ample heavy weapons and a fleet of fighter jets but a shortage of ground troops, meaning it often abandons areas to rebel forces and then pounds them with artillery and airstrikes from afar, sometimes forcing rebel retreats. It also frequently claims to have “secured” areas only to report months later that it “secured” them again, with little explanation of how rebels got back in.

In Damascus, the SANA state news agency said mortar shells exploded in several parts of the city, killing at least three people and wounding others. Most of the strikes hit the city’s east side, falling near a school in the Baramkeh neighborhood.

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(Published 27 March 2013, 00:46 IST)