Hundreds of shops were burning in the ancient covered market of the Old City of Aleppo as deadly fighting between opposition and government forces in Syria's largest city threatened to destroy the UNESCO world heritage site.
Syria's Local Co-ordination Committee, an opposition group, said that at least 41 people were killed in fighting across Syria on Saturday.
The activists said the dead included eight people executed by security forces and Shabiha militias in the Damascus suburb of Qudsaya.
Others were also killed and injured during air strikes and shelling in Aleppo, Deraa, Deir al-Zour, Homs, Idlib and Latakia as the Free Syrian Army announced its control over an army barracks in eastern Deraa.
Al Jazeera was unable to independently verify the information due to restrictions reporting inside Syria.
The uprising-turned-civil war that is now raging across Syria has killed more than 30,000 people, according to activist groups like the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.
Syrian opposition forces announced a joint leadership command on Saturday, which they say will represent more than 80 per cent of opposition forces.
But the prominent Free Syrian Army has not yet agreed to sign up .
Heritage sites destroyed
Beyond the dramatic human cost, many of Syria's historic treasures have also fallen victim to the 18-month-old conflict that has reduced parts of some cities to ruins.
Opposition forces fighting to topple President Bashar al-Assad announced a new offensive in Aleppo, Syria's commercial hub of 2.5 million people, on Thursday, but neither side has appeared to make significant gains.
In Aleppo, activists speaking via Skype said army snipers were making it difficult to approach the Souk al-Madina, the medieval market of vaulted stone alleyways and carved wooden facades that were once a major tourist attraction.
Videos uploaded to YouTube showed dark black clouds hanging over the city skyline. Activists said the fire might have been started by heavy shelling and gunfire on Friday and estimated that 700 to 1,000 shops had been destroyed so far.
Aleppo's Old City is one of several locations in Syria declared world heritage sites by UNESCO, the United Nations cultural agency, that are now at risk from the fighting.
UNESCO believes five of Syria's six heritage sites – which also include the ancient desert city of Palmyra, the Crac des Chevaliers crusader fortress and parts of old Damascus – have been affected.
The British-based Observatory, which has a network of activists across Syria, said Assad's forces and rebels were blaming each other for the blaze.
Deadlock
Activists also reported heavy clashes at Bab Antakya, a stone gateway to Aleppo's Old City, which sits on ancient trade routes and has survived a parade of rulers throughout its construction between the 12th and 17th century.
Opposition forces said they had taken control of the gate, but some activists said the fighting there was continuing and neither side was truly in control.
"No one is actually making gains here, it is just fighting and more fighting, and terrified people are fleeing," an activist contacted by telephone who declined to be named, said.
He said bodies were lying in the streets and residents were not going out to collect them for fear of snipers.
The bloodshed in Syria has escalated since rebels took their fight to the major cities. Activists reported fresh clashes in Damascus and surrounding suburbs and said security forces were torching homes as helicopters buzzed overhead.
The revolt, which began in March 2011 as peaceful protests, has become an armed insurgency that is now able to hold ground in Aleppo and rural towns of northern Syria, close to the Turkish border, but can do little to fend off Assad's air force and artillery.
PHOTO CAPTION
Forces loyal to Syria's President Bashar al-Assad patrol at Tal-al-Zrazir neighborhood in Aleppo city September 29, 2012.
Aljazeera