Islamic State (IS) militants have entered the
Palestinian refugee camp Yarmouk in Damascus, activists and Palestinian
officials say.
Clashes erupted between the militants and groups
inside the camp, with IS seizing control of large parts of the camp, reports
said.
The UN says about 18,000 Palestinian refugees are
inside the camp.
IS militants have seized large swathes of territory
in eastern Syria and across northern and western Iraq.
But this is the group's first major attack near the
heart of the Syrian capital.
IS fighters had seized control of large parts of the
camp, the UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, and an official with
the Palestine Liberation Organisation based in Damascus, said.
Yarmouk residents told BBC Arabic that members of
Aknaf Beit al-Maqdis, a group formed by Palestinian militiamen opposed to the
Syrian government, were leading the fight against the IS militants, along with
some Free Syrian Army fighters.
Palestinian militiamen were able to retake some
areas from IS later on Wednesday,
residents told the BBC.
There has been no official statement from IS about
the attack.
Children at risk
Unrwa, a UN relief agency for Palestinian refugees,
said in a statement that the fighting would place Yarmouk's civilians,
including large numbers of children, "at extreme risk of death, serious
injury, trauma and displacement".
It demanded an end to the fighting and "a
return to conditions that will enable its staff to support and assist Yarmouk's
civilians".