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Man murdered in 'terror' attack
A man believed to be a serving British soldier has been brutally murdered on a London street in a suspected terror attack.
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Fighting rages in battle for Aleppo
According to activists, rebels who launched an operation to take over Syria's largest city a week ago are estimated to control between a third and half of Aleppo's neighbourhoods. (AAP)
As both sides claim the upper hand in the battle for Syria's Aleppo, the rebels have accused government forces of using MiG jets for bombing raids.
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Syrian forces and rebels have clashed violently in and around Aleppo as the battle for control of the northern city rages into a third day.
The fighting has sent some 200,000 civilians fleeing Aleppo, according to the United Nations, which warned of a looming humanitarian catastrophe.
France said it would call an urgent UN Security Council meeting on Syria.
The Syrian army claimed on Monday to have overrun part of the rebel-held Salaheddin district of Aleppo, the country's most populous city and commercial capital, but the claim was denied by a Free Syrian Army commander.
"The Syrian army took control of part of Salaheddin district and continues its offensive," a security source in Damascus told AFP.
However, Colonel Abdel Jabbar al-Oqaidi, head of the FSA military council of Aleppo, insisted that government troops had "not progressed one metre".
"We launched a new assault from Salaheddin during the night, and we destroyed four tanks," the rebel commander told AFP by phone.
Since the launch on Saturday of the regime assault on Aleppo, the FSA "has already repelled three offensives" against Salaheddin, he said, adding that the rebels controlled "between 35 to 40 per cent of Aleppo".
Rami Abdel Rahman, the head of the Syrian Observatory of Human Rights, said regime forces were on Monday "just reaching the outskirts of the (Salaheddin) neighbourhood".
Colonel Oqaidi said that "several quarters of Aleppo are being bombed with MiG (fighter jets) and helicopters".
Activists on the ground reported that a string of rebel-held districts in Aleppo were shelled or hit by machinegun fire during the night. Some were strafed by helicopter gunships.
Outside of Aleppo, rebels seized a strategic checkpoint after a 10-hour battle, securing them free movement between the northern city and Turkey, a FSA commander and an AFP journalist said.
"The Anadan checkpoint ... was taken this morning ... after 10 hours of fighting," said General Ferzat Abdel Nasser, a rebel officer who deserted the Syrian army a month ago.
By securing the checkpoint, about five kilometres northwest of Aleppo, the rebels now control a direct route between the Turkish border and the commercial capital.
An AFP journalist on the ground said that the rebels captured seven tanks and armoured vehicles and destroyed an eighth vehicle.
Six soldiers were killed and 25 were taken as prisoners, General Ferzat told AFP by phone, adding that four of his own men died in the fighting.
An estimated 200,000 people had fled from Aleppo in two days and an unknown number were still trapped in the city, UN humanitarian chief Valerie Amos said in a statement.
Amos said in New York on Sunday that she was "extremely concerned by the impact of shelling and use of tanks and other heavy weapons" on civilians in Aleppo, Damascus and other locations.
Many people in Aleppo had sought shelter in schools and other public buildings, she said.
"They urgently need food, mattresses and blankets, hygiene supplies and drinking water," Amos said.
Meanwhile, US Defence Secretary Leon Panetta warned Syrian President Bashar al-Assad that the assault on his own population in Aleppo would be a nail in his coffin.
"It's pretty clear that Aleppo is another tragic example of the kind of indiscriminate violence that the Assad regime has committed against its own people," Panetta told reporters on a military plane en route to Tunisia.
French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius said in Paris on Monday that his country, which is taking over the UN Security Council's rotating presidency in August, would call an emergency ministerial meeting on Syria.
Fabius told French radio station RTL he would chair the meeting himself and that it had to be held urgently to stop Assad's regime carrying out massacres in Syria.
"Since France is taking the presidency of the UN Security Council on August 1, we will make a request before the end of this week for a Security Council meeting, probably on the ministerial level, to try to stop the massacres and to prepare a political transition," Fabius said.
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