Syrian government warplanes pounded the northwestern city of Jisr al-Shughur on Sunday, a day after its capture by Al-Qaeda and its allies, a monitoring group said.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said at least 20 air strikes hit the city, which had been one of the regime's last remaining strongholds in Idlib province.
There was no immediate word on any casualties from the latest raids, but the Observatory said the death toll from several dozen air strikes on the city on Saturday had risen to 27.
"At least two civilians and 20 fighters were killed in the Saturday air strikes along with five others whose identities are not yet known," Observatory director Rami Abdel Rahman said.
"The toll is expected to rise after the bombing continued overnight and into Sunday."
Fighting between rebel forces and regime troops continued south of the city on Sunday, he added, and opposition fighters had captured at least 40 government forces.
"Ten members of the (pro-regime) National Defence Force were captured yesterday by fighters, and today a group of 30 soldiers were found hiding in a building near the southern entrance of the city," Abdel Rahman said.
"The army launched a failed raid to rescue them."
State television said regime forces had attacked an area by the southern entrance to the city, "killing a group of terrorists," but made no mention of any captured troops.
A rebel alliance including Al-Qaeda affiliate Al-Nusra Front seized Jisr al-Shughur on Saturday, less than a month after capturing the provincial capital Idlib city.
State media said government troops had redeployed outside the city "to avoid casualties among innocent civilians."
"Army units carried out night raids against a number of military positions infiltrated by armed terrorist groups in the area surrounding Jisr al-Shughur," the official SANA news agency reported.
It charged that "terrorist groups carried out a horrific massacre of more than 30 civilians, mostly women and children, after entering Jisr al-Shughur."
But it gave no further details of the alleged killings, and the Observatory said it had received no reports of any massacre of civilians.
On Saturday, the Observatory said its sources had seen the bodies of at least 60 regime loyalists in the streets of Jisr al-Shughur after the battle for the city.
It said at least 23 prisoners had been summarily executed by government forces before their withdrawal.
Al-Nusra posted photographs on its official Twitter account of what it said were the bodies of the slain prisoners.
With the seizure of Jisr al-Shughur, regime forces hold just a few remaining parts of Idlib province, and analyst Thomas Pierret said the city's capture marked a "turning point".
"It's the end of the loyalist counteroffensive that began in spring 2013," said Pierret, a lecturer on contemporary Islam at the University of Edinburgh.
But he noted that while the regime is "in a position of weakness, that doesn't mean it's going to fall tomorrow.
"In 2012, the regime survived despite experiencing greater disasters."
More than 220,000 people have been killed in Syria since the conflict began in March 2011 with anti-government protests that escalated into an armed rebellion.
Source: AFP
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