The Phnom Penh Post

Pakistani couple flee from Syria’s E Ghouta

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AN ELDERLY Pakistani man and his wife have fled Syria’s embattled Eastern Ghouta, the Red Crescent said yesterday, the only known civilians to have left since a “humanitari­an pause” took effect.

The rebel enclave outside Damascus has seen some of the worst bombardmen­t and fighting of the Syrian civil war since Russia-backed government forces launched an assault on February 18.

The evacuation comes after a “humanitari­an pause” announced by Russia came into effect on Tuesday following days of airstrikes and clashes that killed 600 civilians.

“An elderly Pakistani couple were evacuated on Wednesday afternoon from Eastern Ghouta,” a medical source with the Syrian Arab Red Crescent said.

Jaish al-Islam, a dominant rebel faction in the enclave, also said the Pakistani couple had left. “A Pakistani family made up of a man and his wife have been evacuated,” the faction’s Mohamed Alloush said on Twitter.

The Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights, a Britain-based monitor, said the couple were the only people among the besieged enclave’s 400,000 residents to have left since the “humanitari­an pause” started on Tuesday.

Russia this week ordered the daily five-hour pause in the enclave and said it was guaranteei­ng civilians safe passage to flee. But Observator­y head Rami Abdel Rahman said that the Pakistani couple were leaving the enclave not because of “this pause” but as a result of months of negotiatio­ns by the Pakistani Embassy.

Mohammad Fadhl Akram, 73, and his wife Saghran Bibi were evacuated to Damascus.

But they had to leave his two sons, three daughters and 12 grandchild­ren behind, he said in the Eastern Ghouta town of Douma before leaving.

“I hope God protects them,” said Akram, who wore a warm hat and sported a trimmed white beard.

“I don’t want anything else.” Eastern Ghouta has been under siege by regime forces since 2013, with residents facing severe food and medical shortages even before the latest assault.

The Russian announceme­nt fell far short of a full 30-day ceasefire voted for by the United Nations Security Council that has yet to be implemente­d.

Dozens of trucks loaded with relief supplies have been unable to enter the enclave.

More than 340,000 people have been killed since the civil war started in 2011 with the brutal repression of anti-government protests.

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