Syrian Regime to Control More Areas in Buffer Zone

Residents in al-Rai town, northern Syria (File photo: Reuters)
Residents in al-Rai town, northern Syria (File photo: Reuters)
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Syrian Regime to Control More Areas in Buffer Zone

Residents in al-Rai town, northern Syria (File photo: Reuters)
Residents in al-Rai town, northern Syria (File photo: Reuters)

Syrian regime forces, backed by Russian airstrikes, continued on Friday to advance in north Hama, controlling more areas in the buffer zone, which was created in the Sochi deal inked between Russia and Turkey last September.

Informed sources said that Moscow sent its developed T-90S tanks to support regime forces fighting in northwestern Syria.

Russia also provided air cover by striking opposition-held sites in the buffer zone, cities and towns in the countryside of Idlib, Hama and Latakia.

Six members of the regime forces and their allied militias were killed on Friday in an operation launched by the FSA National Liberation Front and other opposition fighters on the axis of Telat Rashou in Latakia’s countryside, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.

Assad’s forces have been struggling to make huge progress in more than three months of military operations in the northwest, the last major foothold of opposition groups in Syria.

The Observatory said that 3,032 people have been killed since the start of the fierce battles in the buffer zone.

Separately, Russia accused the UN of providing "false data" on the coordinates of civilian sites in Idlib, as outrage rises over the apparent bombardment of schools and hospitals in the area.

Russia's envoy to the UN in Geneva, Gennady Gatilov said on Friday that the UN's civilian site tracking in Idlib was based on "false data.”

Gatilov said Turkey could help ease civilian suffering in Idlib by delivering on its promise to separate "terrorists" from civilians in the region.

This week, the UN's Syria humanitarian chief, Panos Moumtzis, told reporters that over the last 100 days his office had confirmed air strikes on "39 health facilities, 50 schools, water points, markets, bakeries and multiple civilian neighborhoods."



UN Agency: Six Days of Flour Left to Distribute in Gaza 

Displaced Palestinians carrying their belongings move towards the city center, in Gaza City, Gaza Strip, 20 March 2025, after the Israeli army issued evacuation orders for the northern areas of the city. (EPA)
Displaced Palestinians carrying their belongings move towards the city center, in Gaza City, Gaza Strip, 20 March 2025, after the Israeli army issued evacuation orders for the northern areas of the city. (EPA)
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UN Agency: Six Days of Flour Left to Distribute in Gaza 

Displaced Palestinians carrying their belongings move towards the city center, in Gaza City, Gaza Strip, 20 March 2025, after the Israeli army issued evacuation orders for the northern areas of the city. (EPA)
Displaced Palestinians carrying their belongings move towards the city center, in Gaza City, Gaza Strip, 20 March 2025, after the Israeli army issued evacuation orders for the northern areas of the city. (EPA)

One of the largest providers of food aid in Gaza warned on Friday it only has enough flour to distribute for the next six days.

"We can stretch that by giving people less, but we are talking days not weeks," Sam Rose from the United Nations' Palestinian relief agency UNRWA told reporters in Geneva, speaking from Central Gaza.

The situation in Gaza is gravely concerning with massive reductions in distribution of aid supplies, UNRWA said.

"Six of 25 bakeries that the World Food Program were supporting had to close down. There are larger crowds on streets outside bakeries," Rose added.

"This is the longest period since the start of conflict in October 2023 that no supplies whatsoever have entered Gaza. The progress we made as an aid system over the last six weeks of the ceasefire is being reversed," Rose added.

Israel in early March blocked the entry of goods into the territory in a standoff over a truce that has halted fighting for the past seven weeks. The move has led to a hike in prices of essential foods as well as of fuel, forcing many to ration their meals.