DAMASCUS: The United Nations launched a record $5.2-billion aid appeal for Syria on Friday as regime forces sought to capitalise on recent victories over the rebels, sending reinforcements to battlefields Homs and Aleppo.
Meanwhile, the UN scrambled to find replacement troops for its peacekeeping mission on the Golan Heights after heavy fighting between regime forces and rebels near its headquarters on Thursday prompted Austria to announce it was pulling out.
The world body said a total of $3.8 billion was needed to help Syrian refugees who have spilled across the country's borders to escape fighting at home.
The figure for operations inside Syria was $1.4 billion.
"If the fighting doesn't stop, we risk an explosion in the Middle East for which the international community is not prepared," UN refugee agency head Antonio Guterres told reporters.
"It is not only a matter of generosity but also of enlightened self-interest."
More than 94,000 people have been killed and some 1.6 million Syrians fled the country since the civil war began in March 2011 after President Bashar al-Assad's cracked down on protests gainst his regime.
The number of refugees is expected to reach at least 3.45 million by the end of this year, according to the UN appeal.
Within the country, 6.8 million people are forecast to need aid this year, the majority of them having been forced to flee their homes because of the fighting.
Government forces were trying on Friday to mop up final pockets of rebel resistance north of Qusayr, the central town near the border with Lebanon that they retook on Wednesday bolstered by fighters from Lebanon's Shiite movement Hezbollah.
At the United Nations, Russia agreed to a Security Council statement demanding that its ally Syria allow humanitarian access to Qusayr.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the army was bombarding another rebel bastion to the north of Qusayr to which hundreds of wounded and civilians had fled.
"Four rebels were killed on Thursday night trying to evacuate the wounded" in eastern Bweida, Observatory head Rami Abdel Rahman told AFP.
He said the army was "leaving no way out for rebels, civilians or the wounded" in its campaign to control the whole Qusayr region.
The Observatory also reported that Assad's forces were sending reinforcements to Aleppo province in northern Syria, where large swathes of territory have been in rebel hands for months.
The army's preparations for a new offensive in the north came a day after a brief rebel seizure of the Quneitra crossing on the armistice line separating Israeli and Syrian troops on the Golan.
<Center><b><i>Copyright AFP (Agence France-Presse), 2013</b></i></center>
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