Syrian President Bashar al-Assad Saturday took part in Eid al-Adha prayers on the second day of his first visit to the former opposition-stronghold Aleppo in over a decade, state media reported.
Assad began the highly symbolic visit on Friday to Syria's second city, formerly held by opposition fighters and militants before it was recaptured in 2016 with crucial Russian backing, marking a major turning point in the country's 11-year war.
Assad performed the prayer at Sahabiy Abdullah bin Abbas mosque in Aleppo, state news agency SANA reported.
It also released a message in which Assad wished the people of Syria and soldiers in the military a happy Eid.
Much of Aleppo was disfigured by the conflict, including its historic Old City, where Assad and his family were pictured walking near the Grand Umayyad mosque on Friday.
SANA on Saturday published images of Assad surrounded by a crowd of clerics and worshippers clamoring to greet him.
Before the war, the northern city -- considered to be one of the world's longest continuously inhabited -- boasted markets, mosques and public baths, but a brutal siege on rebels left it disfigured.
Fighting damaged as much as 60 percent of Aleppo's Old City, according to estimates by the UN's cultural agency, UNESCO.
Aleppo province saw fierce battles between government forces, opposition fighters and ISIS from 2012 until Russian-backed government forces gradually ousted them.
On Friday, Assad visited a major power plant in the province's eastern countryside to supervise its partial relaunch after war damage.
He was also present for the relaunching of a water pumping station, statements from the Syrian presidency said on Telegram.