Alwaght-Syrian forces continue to liberate more areas of Aleppo from foreign-backed terrorists with internet being restored in the region after years of disconnection.
Syrian forces and allied have put foreign-backed terrorists under siege in Aleppo and is poised to capture areas previously occupied by terrorist in what would be a devastating blow to the country's enemies.
Through support from Russia's air force, Syria has managed to liberate strategic areas from terrorists across the country, especially in the north, where a fierce battle is currently going on to recapture the terrorist-held areas of the city of Aleppo.
Aleppo, Syria’s second largest city has been divided since 2012 between government forces in the west and foreign-backed terrorists in the east, making it a frontline battleground.
Latest reports indicate that the Syrian Army launched another powerful assault inside the eastern sector of Aleppo on Tuesday, targeting the Fatah Halab controlled areas in the Bustan Al-Basha and Suleiman Al-Halabi districts.
According to preliminary reports from east Aleppo, the Syrian Armed Forces backed by Liwaa al Quds Palestinian resistance movement have captured several buildings inside Bustan Al-Basha; furthermore, they are steadily pushing north amid fierce fighting with the terrorists.
At Suleiman Al-Halabi, the Syrian Armed Forces launched another assault this morning to recapture the strategic Water Pumping Station that is under Harakat Nouriddeen Al-Zinki's control.
Syrian government protects civilians
Meanwhile, the Syrian Foreign Ministry says the government, due to its keenness on the lives of the citizens living in eastern Aleppo, expresses full readiness to ensure the safety of those who want to leave the area and provide them with the needs of the decent life.
The Syrian government also says it will guarantees the safety of gunmen who want to leave the area to settle their legal status or to head for other areas they select.
The government, according to the source, also guarantees the evacuation of the wounded and providing them with the necessary medical care for the return of the normal life to eastern Aleppo and the resumption of the work of the state service institutions to ensure needs of the citizens who want to stay in eastern Aleppo.
The source continued to say that Aleppo governorate allocated several safe corridors to ensure this process, affirming the Syrian government’s readiness to discuss any initiative to achieve this goal.
Aleppo internet restored
A pointer to advances against terrorists is the Syrian Communications and Technology Ministry announcement that it has managed to restore internet and communications services with full capacity to Aleppo province following years of these services being out.
The Ministry said in a statement on Tuesday that subscribers’ internet speed will return to their original speed from before the outage immediately.
The ministry added that the subscribers can apply for new gates, adding that Syrian Telecom worked to increase the number of allocated gates for Aleppo to meet future needs over time.
Western media ignores atrocities by terrorists
Elsewhere, a Russia Today journalist has visited a school and a hospital in Aleppo and witnessed children who were mutilated by foreign-backed terrorists' mortar and rocket fire in government-controlled areas.
On Monday night was restless for the government-controlled western Aleppo, where multiple mortar shells landed.
The Syrian News Agency, SANA, said that at least four people have been killed and 14 others injured as shells targeted al-Hamadaneyah neighborhood, though the exact number of victims is not immediately clear.
RT’s Murad Gazdiev has seen an appalling aftermath of the indiscriminate fire in an Aleppo hospital. Hassan, a 10-year-old boy born deaf and mute, has lost his leg in the shelling, but he was fortunate enough to survive.
“The day before yesterday he was playing with other boys in al-Hamadaneyah area when the shell landed there,” one of Hassan’s relatives explained. “One of the boys was torn apart completely and my nephew had his foot blown off.”
The hospital seems to be overcrowded with the injured and on the brink of its capacity to provide emergency care; not everyone gets painkillers as they are in short supply.
However the ordeal of civilians risking their lives under rebel shelling in western Aleppo does not get much coverage in Western media.