View PhotoAssociated Press/Qusair Lens - This citizen journalism image provided by Qusair Lens, which has been authenticated based on its contents and other AP reporting, shows a Syrian man checking his destroyed house
BEIRUT (AP) — Backed by elite troops of Lebanon's militant Hezbollah group, Syrian government forces fought rebels in a strategic opposition-held Syrian town near the Lebanese border for the third straight day Tuesday.
Lebanese security officials said fighting between Syrian troops and rebels over the town of Qusair
had spread to the village of Hit, on the Syrian side near the border
with Lebanon. Two opposition fighters were killed and several others
wounded, said the officials, speaking on condition of anonymity in line
with army regulations.
The Syrian conflict also spilled into Lebanon as factions supporting opposing sides in Syria's
civil war fought in the Lebanese port city of Tripoli. The National
News Agency said one person was killed and two others, including a
Syrian citizen, were wounded in the clashes. Earlier in the day, six
people were wounded in another border area close to Qusair after Syrian
shells landed on the Lebanese side, the Lebanese officials said.
Qusair, which had been in rebel hands for more than a year, has been
the target of a government offensive in recent weeks, with the
surrounding countryside engulfed in fighting as regime troops backed by
Hezbollah fighters seized nearby villages and closed in. On Sunday,
Assad's forces pushed deep inside the town, taking control of more than
60 percent of it, according to a Syrian official.
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