The Phnom Penh Post

Largest convoy yet evacuates E Ghouta

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THE largest convoy yet of rebel fighters and civilians evacuated from Eastern Ghouta arrived Tuesday in northweste­rn Syria, further emptying the onetime opposition bastion.

Government troops, backed by Russia and loyalist militia, launched a ferocious assault more than a month ago to retake the enclave on the outskirts of Damascus.

They have recaptured over 90 percent of it and are draining the last rebel-held pockets through negotiated withdrawal­s brokered by Russia. Two such deals have already seen thousands of rebels, their relatives and other civilians bused out of bombed-out Ghouta districts to Idlib, a northweste­rn province most of which still escapes government control.

The largest numbers have quit the towns of Arbin and Zamalka, and the adjacent district of Jobar, all controlled by the Faylaq alRahman Islamist faction.

The group reached a deal with Moscow on Friday and its implementa­tion began the following morning with nearly 1,000 people boarding buses and leaving.

The numbers have grown steadily since, with the biggest convoy yet departing in the early hours of Tuesday with more than 6,700 people aboard.

They arrived on Tuesday afternoon to the Qalaat al-Madiq area of central Hama province, a staging ground frequently used in such deals.

That convoy brought the total number of evacuees from areas under Faylaq al-Rahman’s control to 13,165 people.

The evacuation­s were continuing on Tuesday, with more than a dozen buses entering the Faylaq-controlled pocket, said state news agency SANA.

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