BEIRUT: Pro-Syrian government forces advanced in a Daesh (ISIS) pocket in southwest Syria Sunday, a military media center run by Damascus' ally Hezbollah reported, despite a threat to hostages the militants seized last week.
Syrian state television broadcast footage from near the scene of the fighting showing military vehicles moving along a road.
Daesh holds only a small area of Deraa province near the frontier with the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights, after army advances last week that forced it to retreat.
The group staged a sudden coordinated attack on Wednesday on the city of Sweida and nearby villages from a separate pocket about 65 km from Deraa, killing more than 200 people including many civilians, and seizing some women as hostages.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the army had bombarded the remaining Daesh territory in Deraa province. Hezbollah’s war media center said the Syrian army had advanced towards the town of al-Shajara.
A non-Syrian source close to Damascus said the army had paused its offensive early Sunday, but that this was for logistical reasons rather than because of the hostages.