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Aleppo’s fall won’t end war, Assad says
Tropps continue making gains in rebel-held areas
Syrians fleeing the violence in Aleppo gathered at a checkpoint Thursday manned by progovernment forces in the city. (Youssef Karwashan/AFP/Getty Images )
By Sarah el Deeb
Associated Press

BEIRUT — President Bashar Assad said in comments published Thursday that Syrian forces’ victory in the battle for Aleppo will be a ‘‘big gain’’ for his government but that it would not end the country’s civil war.

Assad’s comments came as his troops were pushing further into the rebel-held enclave in eastern Aleppo, in swift advances that were hardly possible earlier in the bitter conflict, now in its sixth year.

Deeply divided since 2012 between Syrian government and rebel-controlled areas, more than three-quarters of the rebel section has now fallen under the government’s control, including the symbolically important ancient Aleppo quarters. More than 30,000 of the estimated 275,000 residents of the besieged eastern part have fled to western Aleppo.

On Thursday, opposition activists said intensive bombings took place in the al-Sukkari and Kallaseh neighborhoods in the area still held by rebels.

State TV said the troops were about to storm the two districts. Al-Sukkari is in the southern part of eastern Aleppo, an area that has become home to the majority of the displaced civilians who stayed behind. Kallaseh is near the Old City.

The International Committee for the Red Cross said meanwhile that it evacuated 148 disabled civilians and others in need of urgent care from a facility in Aleppo’s Old City after fighting had calmed down there.

The agency said in a statement Thursday that the evacuation was undertaken jointly with the Syrian Arab Red Crescent and was completed late Wednesday. The people had been trapped in a facility that was originally a home for the elderly and included mental health patients, elderly orphans, and patients with physical disabilities. Some were injured civilians who had sought refuge there.

‘‘They were forgotten,’’ said Pawel Krzysiek, the agency’s communication coordinator in Damascus. The evacuees were taken to hospitals and shelters in the western, government-held part of Aleppo.

Others were not as lucky, with eastern Aleppo residents describing bodies lying on the ground because no one could get to them amid intense fighting.

In an emotional plea sent to the media, the head of the eastern Aleppo medical authority called for an immediate cease-fire, saying this was a ‘‘last distress call’’ for help.

‘‘Aleppo is finished. There is nothing left, except a few residents and bricks,’’ Mohammed Abu Jaafar said in a recorded audio message.

Activists are struggling to document casualties because of street clashes and intense bombings.

The Syrian Civil Defense in Aleppo said it was able to record 38 killed in Wednesday’s violence. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said 11 were killed in Old Aleppo, seized by the government Wednesday.

The rebel defenses have buckled amid the government and allies’ wide-ranging offensive, that opened a number of fronts at once and was preceded by an intensive aerial campaign.