Syria war: Pro-Assad forces recapture 10% of Eastern Ghouta, monitors say Published duration 4 March 2018 Related Topics Syrian civil war

image copyright AFP/Getty Images image caption Syria's Eastern Ghouta region has been besieged by pro-government forces for five years

Pro-government forces in Syria have reportedly recaptured about 10% of the rebel-held Eastern Ghouta enclave.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a UK-based monitoring group, says fighting on the ground intensified there on Saturday. Rebels responded by shelling nearby Damascus.

Some 393,000 people are trapped in the Eastern Ghouta, which has been besieged by the government since 2013.

Food and medical stocks are dwindling, and aid trucks are unable to get in.

image copyright AFP/Getty Images image caption The UN called for a 30-day ceasefire in Syria to allow aid deliveries and medical evacuations

Syria's military says it is trying to liberate the region, one of the last rebel strongholds, from those it terms terrorists. But it has also been accused of targeting civilians.

More than 640 people have been killed since 18 February, more than 150 of them children, AFP news agency reports.

media caption "At least in heaven there's food": The children caught up in Eastern Ghouta air strikes

Moscow has offered civilians in the Eastern Ghouta safe passage during the pauses, but the Syrian Observatory says none have departed since Tuesday.

Russia's military said in a statement that no civilians had used the prescribed exit route on Saturday.

In northern Syria, on a different front of the country's seven-year civil war, Turkey says it has captured a Kurdish town in the northern region of Afrin.

At least 36 pro-Syrian government troops - sent to support Kurdish forces - are said to have died in a Turkish air strike.