Syria's President Assad is in Moscow and has been granted asylum, confirms Russian state media

Syria's ousted President Bashar al Assad has arrived in Moscow, Russian state media has confirmed.

Mr Assad and members of his family arrived in the city on Sunday, a Kremlin source told the TASS news agency.

The source said: "Assad and his family members have arrived in Moscow. Russia, for humanitarian reasons, has granted them asylum."

Read more: Latest updates from Syria

Mr Assad left the Syrian capital of Damascus after his government fell following a lightning offensive by anti-regime forces across the country - bringing his 24-year rule to an end.

His whereabouts, as well as those of his wife Asma and their two children, were initially unknown.

As Mr Assad fled, footage on social media showed families gleefully ransacking presidential palaces in Damascus, with some taking selfies in the grand settings, as thousands celebrated in the streets.

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A group of people taking a selfie in a presidential palace in Damascus, Syria. Pic: AP
Image: A group of people taking a selfie in a presidential palace in Damascus, Syria. Pic: AP

People also entered a building near the Damascus palaces, which housed luxury cars thought to belong to the former president.

In videos shared online, people could be seen driving in around inside a garage, past rows of red sports cars and huge 4x4s.

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People enter Syrian presidential palace

Thousands of Syrians, in cars and on foot, also gathered in a main square in the Damascus chanting for freedom.

In the key city of Homs - which rebel fighters seized after just a day of fighting - thousands more filled the streets after the army withdrew, dancing and chanting "Assad is gone, Homs is free", and "Long live Syria and down with Bashar al Assad".

The Syrian regime had faced a battle on three fronts - Hayat Tahrir al Sham (HTS) from the north, the Southern Front, and a Kurdish group in the east.

Syrian rebels, made up of the various opposition groups, said they were working to transition power to a new governing body with full executive powers.

"The great Syrian revolution has moved from the stage of struggle to overthrow the Assad regime to the struggle to build a Syria together that befits the sacrifices of its people," the coalition said in a statement, describing events as a new birth for "great Syria".

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HTS leader Abu Mohammed al Jolani, who led the insurgency, declared "the future is ours" in a statement read out on Syrian state TV.

He said there was "no room for turning back" and his group was "determined" to continue on the path it started in 2011.

Abu Mohammad al Jolani speaking at the Great Umayyad Mosque in Damascus
Image: Abu Mohammad al Jolani speaking at the Great Umayyad Mosque in Damascus

He later addressed a crowd inside the sprawling Umayyad Mosque in Damascus, where he described the fall of Assad as a "victory to the Islamic nation".

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