
	Boys are pictured through a broken windshield as they stand on a street
 in Aleppo
	Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's forces seized a village southeast of
 the city of Aleppo on Friday, reopening a supply line to the country's 
biggest city where they have been battling rebels for eight months, a 
monitoring group said.
	The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the capture of Tel Shghaib
 marked the last step to creating a land supply route north into Aleppo 
from Hama province, crucial for Assad's forces who have lost control of 
part of the main north-south highway.
	Rebels say they hold most of the city itself and nearly all the rural 
hinterland. But they have been unable to achieve a decisive victory and 
complain that they are outgunned and vulnerable to Assad's air force, 
artillery and ballistic missiles, which killed dozens of people in 
Aleppo last week.
	The United States pledged direct but non-lethal aid to the rebels at a 
meeting in Rome on Thursday, disappointing Assad's opponents who had 
hoped for more tangible military support to tip the balance of forces on
 the ground, reports Reuters.
	Activists reported another day of fierce fighting around Aleppo, 
including the military airport at Nairab, three miles north of Tel 
Shghaib which Assad's forces retook.
	"It's a significant gain for the regime," the British-based 
Observatory's director Rami Abdelrahman said of the army's push north, 
which reversed many rebel advances when they moved south into Hama from 
Aleppo province at the end of last year.
	Further east, on the Iraqi frontier, government troops also managed to 
wrest back control of the Yarubiyah border crossing after insurgents 
seized it 24 hours earlier, he said.
	The revolt against Assad, which erupted in March 2011 with mainly 
peaceful protests, has escalated into civil war between mainly Sunni 
Muslim forces and troops and militias loyal to Assad, from the minority 
Alawite community whose faith derives from Shi'ite Islam.
	The United Nations says 70,000 people have been killed, nearly a 
million have fled the country and millions more have been displaced or 
need aid.
	U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said on Friday that Syria, a major 
Arab state on the fault lines of broader Middle East conflict, would 
fall apart if the government and rebels keep fighting instead of seeking
 a negotiated peace.
	"This is a very small window of opportunity which we strongly support 
and encourage them to use that. The opportunity may close soon," Ban 
said in Geneva.
	The government and opposition have both edged away in recent weeks from
 their previous rejection of dialogue. Foreign Minister Walid al-Moualem
 said on Monday the government would even talk to armed rebels and 
opposition coalition leader Moaz Alkhatib has said he is ready to meet 
Assad's representatives.
	But Syrian officials say any serious talks must be on Syrian soil under
 state control, and have shown no readiness to discuss Assad's departure
 - the central demand of the opposition. For rebel fighters, who do not 
answer to exiled civilian opposition leaders, Assad's exit is a 
precondition for any negotiations.
	"I continue to urge the Syrian parties to find their way to the 
negotiating table. The horrors of the last months and years prove beyond
 doubt: the military solution in Syria is leading to the dissolution of 
Syria," Ban said.
	He also called on the U.N. Security Council, paralyzed by a standoff 
between the United States and European allies on one side, pushing for 
U.N. action against Assad, and Russia and China, who have backed Assad, 
to unite and address the crisis.
	Moscow criticized Thursday's meeting in Rome of largely anti-Assad 
Western and Arab states for taking positions and steps which "directly 
encourage extremists" to topple the government by force.
	But the Kremlin also said presidents Vladimir Putin and Barack Obama 
had told their foreign ministers to keep in close touch and seek new 
initiatives to end Syria's civil war.
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said on Thursday Washington would 
provide non-lethal aid including medical supplies and food to rebel 
fighters, as well as $60 million to help the civilian opposition provide
 services including security, education and sanitation

 
 

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