Islamic State bombs kill 12 Syria regime loyalists in Hasakeh: Report
Beirut: Three Islamic State group car bombs killed 12 Syrian troops and militiamen in the north-eastern city of Hasakeh where the jihadists have taken two districts, a monitor said today.
The Sunday blasts came as troops battle to evict the jihadists from the two southern neighbourhoods they seized on Thursday.
"At least 12 regime soldiers and allied fighters were killed in the blasts," the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.
Nine IS fighters were killed in clashes with regime forces on Sunday, it added.
The fighting was continuing today.
State news agency SANA said government forces destroyed an IS truck bomb, killing or wounding "a number of terrorists."
According to the United Nations, 60,000 people have been displaced by the fighting in the city, a provincial capital that had a pre-war population of 300,000.
The army has brought in reinforcements and has prevented the jihadists from advancing further but has struggled to push them back.
The Observatory reported fresh air strikes against IS positions in the city today, and jihadist shelling of government-controlled neighbourhoods.
Kurdish forces, which control several northern districts of the city, have so far restricted their involvement in the fighting to the defense of their own neighbourhoods.
IS has sought repeatedly to enter Hasakeh, including last month when it advanced to the southern outskirts before being pushed back in heavy fighting.
IS has captured around 50 percent of Syria's territory since it emerged in the country in 2013.