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Fighting erupts in new region of Syria

Central Syrian town hit after border attack

In this image from video obtained from Ugarit News, Free Syrian Army soldiers stand at a checkpoint in Raqqa, Syria, on Tuesday. (Associated Press)
Patrick J. Mcdonnell Los Angeles Times

BEIRUT – Fierce clashes were reported Thursday in an area of north-central Syria where anti-government rebels earlier seized a border post across from neighboring Turkey.

Word of fighting in Al Raqqa province suggests that the tribal region, long regarded as a bastion of support for the government of President Bashar Assad, could be the latest battle zone in a conflict that has spread across much of the nation.

The region of Al Raqqa sits strategically between two heavily contested provinces – Aleppo and Dair Elzur, both featuring raging battles and large swaths of territory in rebel hands.

The opposition said at least 30 people were killed Thursday in the aerial bombardment by government forces of a busy gas station in the Raqqa town of Ain Issa. Unverified video footage posted online by opposition activists showed billowing black smoke and charred and burning vehicles.

There was no independent confirmation of the incident.

According to the opposition and human rights groups, the Syrian military is increasingly turning to air and artillery strikes, in part to preserve its thinly stretched security forces.

As the uprising enters its 18th month, the military has been deployed to ever-expanding theaters of combat, even as defections and high casualty rates batter their ranks.

Rebels said the gas station was south of the border crossing of Tal Abyad, which they reportedly seized on Wednesday after heavy fighting.

The Turkish media reported that schools were closed in the nearby Turkish border town of Akcakale, after stray bullets from the fighting struck a high school and several houses on the Turkish side.

The Tal Abyad post became at least the third border crossing along the Syrian-Turkish frontier said to fall to rebel gunmen. The loss of border facilities has highlighted the government’s eroding control of the rebellious north. Rebel tricolors now fly along seized border strips.

Apart from their symbolic importance, the border posts can provide key logistics corridors for rebel arms and other supplies arriving to the opposition from Turkey.

The official Syrian news agency reported that the military had inflicted “heavy losses” on “terrorists” in the border zone of Tal Abyad during heavy clashes.