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The Syrian army has restored control over all areas surrounding the capital Damascus, it said on Monday, 21 May, for the first time since early in the seven-year war, after pushing ISIS militants out of a south Damascus pocket.
Pro-Syrian government forces have been battling for weeks to recover al-Hajar al-Aswad district and the adjacent Yarmouk Palestinian refugee camp from the ISIS since driving rebels from eastern Ghouta in April.
In a televised statement, Syria's army high command said al-Hajar al-Aswad and Yarmouk had been cleared of militants.
With its complete capture of the environs of the capital, the government of President Bashar al-Assad is now in by far its strongest position since the early days of the war, which has killed more than half a million people and driven more than half the population from its homes since 2011.
Turkey and the United States also have presences in parts of Syria outside government control.
The ultra-hardline jihadist group ISIS, which was driven from most of the Euphrates River valley last year, now controls only two besieged desert areas in eastern Syria. Another insurgent group that has pledged loyalty to it holds a small enclave in the southwest.
ISIS also captured a third of neighbouring Iraq in 2014 but was largely defeated there last year.
A temporary humanitarian ceasefire had been in place since Sunday night in al-Hajar al-Aswad to allow women, children and old people to leave the area, state media said early on Monday.
Buildings and walls were pock-marked from bullets and shell-fire, metal satellite dishes were bent and scorched, and the dome of a mosque had a gaping hole near its base.
On Sunday, a war monitor said fighters had begun withdrawing from the area towards ISIS territory in eastern Syria under a surrender deal, but state media said fighting continued.
A US-led military coalition fighting ISIS in Syria and Iraq said in an emailed statement to Reuters it was "aware of reports of an evacuation near Yarmouk and south Damascus" and was monitoring the situation.
While Assad has vowed to win back "every inch" of Syria, the map of the conflict suggests a complicated time ahead.
The US military is in much of the east and northeast, which is controlled by Kurdish groups that want autonomy from Damascus. It has used force to defend the territory from pro-Assad forces.
Turkey has sent forces into the northwest to counter those same Kurdish groups, carving out a buffer zone where anti-Assad rebels have regrouped.
In the southwest, where rebels hold territory at the Israeli and Jordanian border, Assad faces the risk of conflict with Israel, which wants his Iranian-backed allies kept well away from the frontier and has mounted air strikes in Syria.
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