Damascus outskirts rocked by heavy fighting

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Rebel strongholds around the Syrian capital, Damascus, have been rocked by fighting and heavy shelling for a second straight day as the army launched a major offensive that opposition activists claim killed 55 people in 24 hours.
Among those killed were five civilians, three of them women, who died when mortars hit the Yarmuk Palestinian refugee camp on the southern outskirts of the capital, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said on Thursday. The watchdog had reported the launch of an offensive by President Bashar al-Assad’s forces on rebel belts on the outskirts of Damascus on Wednesday, while residents reported the heaviest bombardments in months.
The Observatory reported early on Thursday that at least 19 civilians, 28 rebels and eight soldiers have been killed since the launch of the offensive, which is focused in the southern and eastern outskirts of the capital.
It said that rebels attacked a security checkpoint between the northeast Qaboon district and Abassid Square near the centre of the capital, sparking fierce fighting.
Military reinforcements: “The attack was to relieve the rebels in Daraya,” opposition activist Omar Shakir told AFP news agency via Skype, referring to an embattled southwestern suburb of Damascus that has been under continuous army bombardment for months.
The London-based Observatory reported the arrival on Thursday of new military reinforcements at Daraya, strategic for its location near the sprawling Al-Mazzeh military airbase and key to the army’s bid to drive opposition fighters from the capital.