Fighting raged in a strategic district of Syria’s commercial capital Aleppo yesterday, the third day of a rebel offensive to seize the city, monitors said.

The rebels have a strong presence there, and the army wants to root them out once and for all

The US and Britain, meanwhile, pledged more than another $55 million (€43 million) in funding for humanitarian aid and the civilian opposition.

The focal point of combat was Salaheddin, a rebel stronghold on the southwest side of the city where insurgents attacked an army position, said the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

It also warned that the wooden-doored shops of the famous souk marketplace in central Aleppo, a popular tourist destination before Syria’s violence erupted in March 2011, were set ablaze in the clashes between rebels and soldiers.

Elsewhere, the army stepped up operations on the Eastern Ghuta area of Damascus.

“The rebels have a strong presence there, and the army wants to root them out once and for all,” Observatory head Rami Abdel Rahman said.

Damascus-based citizen journalist Matar Ismail said the “army is taking revenge against Damascus, and it is mainly the civilians who are paying the price.

“The situation here is very bad, especially in the eastern areas. And the regime is executing many men summarily.”

The Eastern Ghuta area of the capital and its province is home to some of the rebel Free Syrian Army’s fiercest and best organised battalions, including Tajamo Ansar al-Islam.

On Wednesday, two car bombs struck an army headquarters in Damascus, and Tajamo Ansar al-Islam was the first FSA group to claim responsibility for the operation.

Meanwhile, fighting raged in several districts of Aleppo, where rebels launched on Thursday an all-out campaign to capture the northern city, the scene of some of Syria’s fiercest violence since July 20, the Observatory said.

Battles broke out in the central Old City and eastern Arkub districts, said the British-based watchdog.

Residents of Suleiman al-Halabi, one of Aleppo’s main districts, reported finding an unknown number of abandoned corpses on the streets, Abdel Rahman told AFP.

A total of 37 people were killed in violence across the strife-torn country, including 19 civilians, most of them in Damascus province, said the Observatory, adding that 18 soldiers were also killed in combat.

Also yesterday, Assad’s forces shelled localities in the southern province of Daraa as well as in Deir Ezzor to the east.

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