Syrian opposition take border crossing from Daesh


A Free Syrian Army faction seized control of the Syrian side of a major Syria-Iraq border crossing from the Daesh terror organization on Friday night, as Daesh fighters engaged government forces in the center of the country, killing at least 15 soldiers.The Local Coordination Committees' network of opposition activists in Syria reported Saturday that fighters belonging to the FSA Southern Front and reportedly supported by the United States killed one Daesh fighter and injured several others in the process of taking the Tanaf border crossing.According to the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, the FSA fighters crossed into Syria from Jordan to launch the attack.The Daesh-affiliated Aamaq News Agency denied the reports. The Daesh group had controlled the crossing, located in Homs province in southeast Syria, since government forces withdrew in May 2015.Daesh fighters meanwhile attacked the government's supply route to the contested northern city of Aleppo killing between 15 and 20 soldiers, according to various reports. Government forces repelled the attack and secured the road, according to the Observatory and SANA, the Assad regime's news agency.