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Two dead as rebel rockets hit Syria regime bastion: monitor

Two people were killed and 14 wounded Thursday in a rare rebel rocket attack on the provincial capital of President Bashar al-Assad's coastal heartland, a monitoring group said. According to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, rebel groups stationed around the city of Latakia fired rockets into the city centre and along the waterfront. "At…
Map of Syria. Image source lonelyplanet

Map of Syria. Image source lonelyplanet

Two people were killed and 14 wounded Thursday in a rare rebel rocket attack on the provincial capital of President Bashar al-Assad’s coastal heartland, a monitoring group said.

According to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, rebel groups stationed around the city of Latakia fired rockets into the city centre and along the waterfront.

“At least two people were killed and 14 people were wounded when rockets fell on March 8 street, near the (Islamic authority) Dar al-Ifta building in the middle of the city,” Observatory head Rami Abdel Rahman said.

He said rebel factions — mostly from Islamist groups — were taking up positions overlooking the city and firing rockets before leaving for areas under their control.

Syria’s official SANA news agency reported that “several people were wounded on Thursday morning when rockets fell on Latakia and caused material damage.”

State television channel Al-Ikhbariya showed footage of a city street with several cars on fire, saying it was the scene of the rocket attack.

Thick black smoke billowed out of the charred vehicles as a fire truck sped down the street and people hurriedly walked away.

On May 25, four people were killed in a large blast in Latakia city, which some sources attributed to rebel rocket fire.

A power rebel alliance including Al-Qaeda’s Syria affiliate Al-Nusra Front is edging towards Latakia province from Sahl al-Ghab, a strategic plain in the adjacent Hama province.

The Army of Conquest is only two kilometres (just over a mile) away from the regime’s regional military headquarters in the town of Jureen.

If the rebels manage to capture Jureen, they will be able to advance into the mountains of Latakia and bomb several communities from Assad’s Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shiite Islam.

The western seaboard region of Syria has largely been spared the worst of the violence that has wracked the country since an uprising that began in March 2011.

Many Syrians displaced by violence in neighbouring regions have taken refuge in Latakia province and some businesses have moved to the relative safety of the area.

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