National Post

‘It’s a wasteland’: Images lay bare Syria destructio­n

Enclave of Eastern Ghouta almost ruined

- JOSIE ENSOR

Damascus is a tale of two cities. On one side, buildings stand tall, divided by neat rows of flowering trees. On the other, it’s a vision of hell.

In the government- controlled west, people attend work, school and dinner parties. In rebel- held Eastern Ghouta a few hundred metres away, they hide in basements, awaiting the next air strike.

The military siege of the eastern suburb of the capital, home to nearly 400,000 residents, began in 2012 and has become one of the longest and most brutal in modern history.

For five years the enclave of 100 square kilometres has been pummelled by the Syrian regime, and more recently by Russia’s bombs, in efforts to dislodge the opposition from its stronghold and protect Bashar Assad’s seat of power.

Satellite imagery captured last week by McKenzie Intelligen­ce Services lays bare the level of destructio­n. The most striking image shows the div- iding line between al- Qassaa on t he regime side and Jobar on the rebel side. Grey smudges denote the remains of levelled buildings. Craters dot the roads and streets have been wiped off the map. Smoke rises from the latest strikes.

“There is little sign of daily life here,” said McKenzie’s Stuart Ray, a former British military intelligen­ce officer. “We could see no cars driving or people on the streets, no shopkeeper­s opening their stores. It’s a wasteland.”

According to the United Nations, 91 per cent of Jobar has been destroyed by the regime’s strikes, which have intensifie­d in recent weeks. Government territory is regularly hit by mortars from rebel areas of Ghouta, but the damage is nothing to the devastatio­n of the barrel bombs.

The UN identified about 3,853 destroyed, 5,141 severely damaged and 3,547 moderately damaged buildings in the more densely-populated western parts of the enclave. In the Ein Terma neighbourh­ood, where 18,500 still live, satellite images show 71 per cent of buildings destroyed or damaged.

In Zamalka, another major neighbourh­ood, 59 per cent of buildings are destroyed or damaged. There has been no water or electricit­y for two years.

Russian and Syrian bombs in discrimate­ly land on schools and hospitals almost daily.

Since the government’s offensive escalated two weeks ago, 14 medical facilities have been taken out of service, ac- cording to the Union of Medical Care and Relief Organisati­ons (UOSSM). More than 10 medical staff and volunteers have been killed, with 20 injured. Doctors treat and operate on patients in undergroun­d rooms to escape the air strikes.

“From looking at the satellite images, you can see it’s a scorched earth policy,” Ray said. “In contrast to Sarajevo, the damage is incomparab­le. Even in the worst hit areas of Sarajevo some buildings still stood.”

He said it was possible the Syrian government had used thermobari­c weapons, explosives that use oxygen from the surroundin­g air to generate a high-temperatur­e explosion, in an area west of Douma. “All the trees and vegetation are gone and the buildings are no longer there but there are no craters,” he said. “It’s possible they were trying to clear that area to serve as a buffer.”

The conflict enters its eighth year this month, having seen hundreds of thousands of people killed and half the pre- war population of 23 million forced from their homes.

Eastern Ghouta is not the first Syrian territory to be decimated. Swathes of Homs, Aleppo and Raqqa are uninhabita­ble after campaigns to oust rebel fighters and the Islamic State.

“Eastern Ghouta is straight out of the Aleppo playbook,” said one Western diplomat. “I’m afraid we’ll have no option but to sit and watch it all play out again. What we saw in Aleppo could pale in comparison to what’s to come in Eastern Ghouta.”

There is a fear the battle will become one of attrition. Assad’s “starve or surrender” tactic, as it has become known, has proved effective and is much less costly for his troops.

Cut off from the outside world, residents survive on what they can grow to eat and whatever they can smuggle in through one of their remaining tunnels. Tending to crops has become a deadly business, however, and few dare to venture out in full view of the drones overhead. Bread in Eastern Ghouta costs nearly 22 times the amount it does in government-held Damascus. Several children have died of malnutriti­on. Aleppo fell within weeks of a government offensive in December 2016. Eastern Ghouta could take months.

Under a truce declared by Russia, the Syrian government this week opened a “humanitari­an” corridor for those who wanted to leave. So far only an elderly Pakistani couple have passed through. Residents fear a repeat of Aleppo, where civilians who made it out of the city were tortured, arrested or displaced. “Russia is the only one who can stop this now,” the diplomat said. “But they seem impervious to internatio­nal condemnati­on and shame.”

However, he noted at January peace talks in the Russian city of Sochi there appeared to be tensions emerging between Syrian and Russian positions. In turn, the UN feels held to ransom by Vladimir Putin, Russia’s president. But Staffan de Mistura, the UN’s Syria envoy, warned: “We cannot afford the luxury of giving up.”

THERE IS LITTLE SIGN OF DAILY LIFE HERE.

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