Syria conflict: Heavy fighting stepped up in Aleppo

Syrian resident inspects damaged houses after shelling in Qadam, Damascus August 4, 2012Heavy fighting continues unabated in Syria's second city Aleppo, as fears grow that the army will launch a full-scale assault within days.
Military sources say
around 20,000 troops are massed around the city, and rebels said they were prepared for a "strong offensive".
In Damascus, army sources said they had pushed rebels from a last stronghold. The rebels said they had withdrawn.
On Saturday, 48 Iranian pilgrims were kidnapped by gunmen near a Shia shrine.
Iranian diplomats and Syrian state television blamed the abduction, which took place near the shrine of Sayyida Zainab in a suburb of Damascus, on "armed groups".
Iran has now asked Turkey and Qatar, both of whom have good relations with the Syrian opposition, to help win the Iranians' release.
Rebels claimed on Sunday that some of those taken were members of Iran's elite Revolutionary Guards, according to al-Arabiya television.
Both Turkey and Qatar have agreed to use their connections with the Syrian opposition to try to secure the release of the Iranians.
Pilgrims from Iran, and engineers working in Syria, have been abducted in the past, but most are reported to have been released after some time.
Iran is by far the Syrian government's most important regional ally, and has said it will stand by it through thick and thin, says the BBC's Jim Muir in neighbouring Beirut.
But Iranian leaders have denied that they have any forces on the ground in Syria.
Thousands of Iranians travel each year to Syria to visit the pilgrimage site in the mostly Shia district of Sayyida Zainab, which has seen heavy fighting in recent weeks.
Fight for Aleppo In the northern city of Aleppo, areas where rebels are entrenched have been bombarded by government forces and clashes have been reported in several districts.
President Bashar al-Assad's forces have reportedly used artillery, planes and a helicopter gunship to pound rebel positions.
The Syrian military has been steadily building up its forces around the city with, alongside troops, large numbers of tanks and other armoured vehicles, says the BBC's Richard Galpin, on the Turkish border.
There is already fierce fighting in and around the city as troops try to push rebel forces out from southern and eastern districts.
Parts of Damascus have been badly damaged by army shelling
The rebels, who have also increased their numbers, are well dug in and continue to try to extend the territory under their control, our correspondent says.
The biggest advantage for the government is the use of helicopters and fighter jets; but more troops will also have to fight their way into the city if they are to stand any chance of retaking it, and that will make it a much more even battle, he adds.
Abdel Jabar Oqaida, a commander of the Free Syrian Army (FSA) in Aleppo, told the AFP news agency that the restive Salah al-Din district had "come under the heaviest bombardment since the battle began" on 20 July.
A senior government security official told the agency: "The battle for Aleppo has not yet begun, and what is happening now is just the appetiser... the main course will come later."
The fight for the key strategic city has been intensifying over the last few days, with Syrian state television reporting that troops had inflicted huge losses on what it called "terrorist mercenaries" in Salah al-Din and in other nearby areas.
'In government hands' In the capital, government forces claimed to have pushed out rebel fighters from their final stronghold in the city, the southern neighbourhood of Tadamon.
An opposition activist told AFP from Beirut that the FSA had withdrawn from the district and would focus on "hit-and-run tactics against important regime targets".
On Saturday, shelling and gunfire were still heard in Tadamon despite it having been earlier stormed by government forces.
State media has reported that the whole of Damascus is now in government hands, but such reports are impossible to verify and the situation on the ground is changing fast.
Activists say more than 20,000 people - mostly civilians - have died in 17 months of unrest.
Meanwhile, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton will travel to Turkey on 11 August for talks on the conflict in Syria, the US State Department said.
Mrs Clinton is adding the stop in Turkey to her lengthy tour of Africa.

A boy plays on the gun of a destroyed Syrian army tank partially covered in the rubble of the destroyed Azaz mosques, north of the restive city of Aleppo, on Thursday, August 2.Smoke rises from Al-Safsaf in Homs on Friday, August 3. A boy plays with an AK-47 rifle owned by his father in Azaz, some 29 miles north of Aleppo on Friday, August 3. Syrians climb on an abandoned Syrian army tank north of Aleppo on Thursday, August 2.A man looks at a destroyed Syrian army compound in Azaz, 29 miles north of Aleppo on Friday, August 3.A woman and child on Wednesday walk through rubble of a building destroyed by shelling from forces loyal to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad in Aleppo.Rebel Free Syrian Army fighters capture a policeman who they allege is a "Shabiha" or pro-regime militiaman, on Tuesday, July 31, as the rebels overrun a police station in Aleppo.Rebel fighters load an anti-aircraft machine gun on an armored vehicle in Atareb, east of Syria's second-largest city, Aleppo, on Tuesday, July 31.Syrian boys run near a building hit by bullets and fire in Atareb. A photo released by Syrian Arab News Agency depicts damaged buildings in Homs on Monday, July 30.Parts of Syria's largest city saw the fiercest clashes yet in the country's 16-month crisis on Saturday, July 28. About 200,000 people have fled fighting in Aleppo and surrounding areas in the past two days, a U.N. official says.Smoke from artillery shelling rises above Jbatha Al-khashab.An armed Syrian rebel wearing the jersey of FC Barcelona rests with comrades near the northern city of Aleppo on Sunday. The rebel Free Syrian Army announced the start of the battle to "liberate" Aleppo, Syria's commercial hub and a traditional bastion of President Bashar al-Assad's regime.In this photo released by the Shaam News Network, a truck burns after shelling in the Erbeen suburb of Damascus on Saturday, July 21.Refugees fleeing the violence in Syria arrive by bus in Baghdad, Iraq, on Saturday.Burned-out trucks at the Bab al-Hawa Syrian border post with Turkey on Friday, July 20. Syrian rebels seized control of the post after a fierce battle with Syrian troops, an AFP photographer at the scene reported.Journalists are shown a dead body on a government tour of the al-Midan area in Damascus on Friday.Syrian army soldiers hang their national flag in a partially destroyed neighborhood in the al-Midan area in Damascus.People walk along the street in Atareb amidst damage caused by clashed between Syrian soldiers and the Free Syrian Army.The death toll in Syria on July 12 reached 287, making it the bloodiest day in Syria since the uprising began. As it has done consistently, Syrian state television blamed "armed terrorist groups" for the killings.A Syrian woman sits with her grandson outside a damaged building after attacks in the Syrian village of Treimsa on July 13, 2012. More than 200 people were massacred in the town, according to activists.