Damascus - Agencies
Rastan has long been a bastion for Syrian opposition fighters
Syrian forces on Wednesday pounded a rebel bastion in central Syria, as a monitoring group said six people were killed across the country.
Reports also emerged that the UN had brokered
an exchange between forces loyal to Syrian president Bashar al-Assad and opposition fighters.
Rastan was bombed at an average rate of “one shell a minute” said the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.
Besieged by regime forces, Rastan is home to a large number of rebel fighters, according to opposition sources.
Most of Rastan’s residents have fled after months of fighting, but regime forces have been unable to regain control of the town. On May 14, 23 regular troops were killed in fighting during a failed assault.
As many as 25 people were reported to have been killed by the gunfire of Syrian forces on Tuesday across the country, activists said.
In the southern province of Deraa, one civilian was shot dead near an army checkpoint at Inkhel, said the British-based Observatory.
In nearby Sheikh Meskin, several youths were arrested, according to the watchdog.
Another civilian was killed by regime forces in the northern city of Aleppo, while in Qusayr in central Homs province, a third civilian was shot dead by a sniper, the monitoring group added.
In the suburbs of Damascus, a blast killed three people on the international airport road, the Observatory said, without specifying whether they were civilians or soldiers.
A loud explosion was heard in the capital Damascus, the Observatory said, without providing any further details on the blast.
Other blasts were heard in several Syrian provinces during the night, including Harasta and Douma, two suburbs of the capital that have seen fierce fighting between regime and rebel forces in the past few days.
Fighting has grown increasingly violent around the capital Damascus, Syria\'s largest city Aleppo and northwest Idlib, despite the presence of UN truce monitors on the ground.
More than 12,000 people have been killed in Syria since a revolt broke out in March last year, prompting the regime to launch a fierce crackdown on dissent.
Meanwhile, a UN team in Syria said it has brokered an exchange between forces loyal to Assad and opposition fighters seeking to topple his regime.
The UN said in a statement late Tuesday that government forces released two detainees from the town of Khan Sheikhoun in northwest Syria in exchange for permission to retrieve a destroyed tank, according to the Associated Press.
Video posted online showed members of the UN team interacting with both sides and a large trailer removing a charred tank from the town.
More than 250 UN observers are in Syria trying to salvage a peace plan to end the country’s 14-month-old crisis. But a cease-fire meant to start last month has never fully taken hold, undermining the rest of the plan.