Syrian regime forces Friday sought to mop up the final pockets of rebel resistance north of Qusayr, after retaking the key town that was an insurgent bastion for a year, a watchdog said. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said President Bashar al-Assad's forces were also sending reinforcements to the northern province of Aleppo, where large swathes of territory have been in rebel hands for months. "Clashes broke out at dawn between the army and rebels on the outskirts of Dabaa village" north of Qusayr near the border with Lebanon, said the Britain-based group which relies on activists and medics on the ground for its information. Official Syrian media had reported that Dabaa fell on Thursday. Al-Manar, the television channel of Lebanon's Shiite Hezbollah movement which was instrumental in helping Assad's forces to seize Qusayr, quoted a general as saying his troops had launched a surprise attack. This was aimed at "the liberation of Dabaa" from rebels, he said. A second rebel bastion north of Qusayr, Eastern Bweida where hundreds of wounded and civilians fled after the fall of Qusayr, was still being bombarded by the regime. "Four rebels were killed on Thursday evening while trying to evacuate wounded," Observatory director Rami Abdel Rahman told AFP. At least 15 rebels were killed on Thursday in bombardments of Dabaa and Eastern Bweida, the group said. Analysts say regime forces will now turn their attention on the central city of Homs, where some areas are still rebel in rebel hands. The Observatory said government forces were also massing in Aleppo province in the north, aiming primarily to take insurgent-held territory along the border with Turkey. Austria, meanwhile, said Thursday it was withdrawing its troops from a UN peacekeeping force on the Golan because of the deteriorating security. Qusayr's capture gives President Bashar al-Assad the upper hand if a US-Russian plan for the first direct peace talks with his opponents materialises, analysts say. Russia said Syrian Foreign Minister Walid Muallem would lead a government delegation at the "Geneva 2" talks which have been delayed largely over opposition disputes about who will attend. The rebels briefly took control of the Quneitra crossing, strategically and symbolically important for its proximity to Israeli forces and to Damascus, before being forced out. An AFP correspondent said he could see tanks inside the area after Assad's troops moved back in Thursday. Both the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights and Israeli army radio said the rebel advance had included fierce fighting in nearby Quneitra town. The clashes were very close to the headquarters of a UN peacekeeping force, prompting Austria to announce it was withdrawing its troops and throwing the mission into disarray. Two peacekeepers, from India and the Philippines, suffered "minor injuries" in shelling, a UN peacekeeping spokesman said. In Vienna, the government said the threat to Austrian soldiers "has reached an unacceptable level." Defence Minister Gerald Klug said the withdrawal would take between two and four weeks and could begin as soon as Tuesday. Neutral Austria has been part of the UN Disengagement Observer Force in the Golan since its inception in 1974 and is currently one of the biggest UNDOF contributors, with some 380 troops. The UN peacekeeping force's numbers already dropped to around 900 in March after Croatia became the latest country to withdraw its soldiers, following similar moves by Canada and Japan. UN leaders held emergency talks on replacing the Austrian troops. UN chief Ban Ki-moon, through his spokesman, expressed concern "about the potential consequences of such a withdrawal on the peacekeeping operation and also on regional security". The Quneitra crossing, the only direct passage between Israel and Syria, is used almost exclusively by Druze residents of the Golan who are allowed to cross to study, work or get married. Israel seized a large section of the plateau from Syria in the 1967 Six-Day War and annexed it in 1981, a move never recognised internationally. Thursday's flareup prompted Israel to reinforce its military presence on the plateau, Israeli public radio said. The developments came as soldiers hunting rebels who fled from Qusayr fired missiles at Eastern Bweida about 14 kilometres (nine miles) away, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said. Qusayr, just 10 kilometres from Lebanon, was once home to more than 25,000 people. But thousands fled during the blistering 17-day regime onslaught, led by fighters from the Lebanese Shiite movement Hezbollah. "Qusayr is completely destroyed, and totally deserted," Rami Abdel Rahman, the director of Syria's human rights observatory, told AFP. The regime "has called on Qusayr's residents to return home, but there is nothing but ruins. How are they supposed to return?" Hours after Qusayr fell, at least five rockets fired from Syria hit the eastern Lebanese city of Baalbek, a Hezbollah stronghold. Two people were hurt. In northern Lebanon, fierce clashes raged in the centre of the port city of Tripoli on Thursday killing one person and wounding seven, a security official said, in the latest Syria-related violence. The fighting came as Paris said the international community must respond to test results from both French and British laboratories confirming the use of banned nerve agent sarin in Syria's war. US State Department spokeswoman Jen Pseki said Thursday that Washington had received and was evaluating the information, which it did not intend to "evaluate or litigate in public".
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