Thousands flee besieged enclave in Syria as aid convoy arrives

Thousands flee besieged enclave in Syria as aid convoy arrives

Thousands of civilians streamed out of a town in Syria’s besieged, opposition-held enclave of eastern Ghouta on Thursday.

They were crossing on foot and in pick-up trucks and tractors to government-held territory near the capital, Damascus.

Footage on state-run Al-Ikhbariya TV showed men, women and children walking out of the town of Hamouria carrying their belongings, including clothes and mattresses and suitcases.

The broadcaster showed a herd of sheep among the crowds leaving through the crossing.

The channel said nearly 10,000 people left on Monday — the largest civilian exodus from eastern Ghouta since the government launched a punishing assault on the rebel-held region more than three weeks ago.

More than 1,200 civilians have been killed in government and Russian air strikes and rocket fire.

Syrian government soldiers during a battle against Syrian rebels in eastern Ghouta (SANA via AP)
Syrian government soldiers during a battle against Syrian rebels in eastern Ghouta (SANA via AP)

Al-Mayadeen TV showed buses waiting to pick up civilians. Al-Ihkbariya said they will be taken to a centre for identification and relief.

Men interviewed by state-TV reporters heaped praise on the army and President Bashar Assad and said armed groups had humiliated them and held them against their will in eastern Ghouta.

The government and rebels have traded accusations over who is blocking civilians from leaving.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitoring group put the number of those who had left eastern Ghouta so far at 9,300.

It also said government forces targeted a column of civilians fleeing Hamouria before dawn on Thursday, wounding several people, and that 26 people were killed in government strikes on the town on Wednesday.

Syrian civilians, who fled fighting between government forces and rebels, at an army checkpoint in eastern Ghouta (SANA via AP)
Syrian civilians, who fled fighting between government forces and rebels, at an army checkpoint in eastern Ghouta (SANA via AP)

The International Committee of the Red Cross managed to send a joint relief agencies convoy with aid for thousands of displaced into another part of eastern Ghouta, the town of Douma.

According to Syrian Civil Defence, also known as White Helmets, the organisation’s first responders were unable to reach the wounded in several other towns in eastern Ghouta because of the intensity of the assault. It said one of its rescue workers was killed in an air strike on the town of Hazeh.

“They are burning Ghouta to the ground,” said Anas al-Dimashqi, a media activist and resident of Kafr Batna, a town also targeted in intense air strikes on Thursday.

Mr Dimashqi, the White Helmets and the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported that government and Russian aircraft were using napalm-like incendiary weapons to spread fires in the towns.

The Syrian government, backed by its allies Iran and Russia, is determined to retake control of the region just outside Damascus, after seven years of war and bloodletting that has killed around 450,000 people and displaced millions.

Damascus and Moscow have ignored a February 25 UN Security Council resolution demanding a ceasefire for the entire country.

The eastern Ghouta region was one of the hubs of the uprising against President Bashar Assad in 2011 and was quickly targeted for siege, mass arrests, and extrajudicial killings by security forces.

Government forces separated the region in two parts earlier this week, and isolated the area’s largest town, Douma, from the rest of the suburbs.

Douma has seen four days of relative calm, said local media activist Youssef Boustani.

The 25-truck aid convoy organised by the international Red Cross, the Syrian Red Crescent, and the United Nations crossed into eastern Ghouta on Thursday, according to the ICRC, and was expected to deliver aid later in the day.

Damascus routinely blocks the aid agencies from delivering relief to opposition-held areas in the country.

The Russian military, meanwhile, said it had extended a “humanitarian pause” to operations targeting Douma through Thursday and Friday. It claimed the pause has allowed growing numbers of civilians to reach safety.

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