Trudeau asked Israel to rescue White Helmets from Syria, says Israeli prime minister
Trudeau sought help for White Helmets, Netanyahu says
JERUSALEM — Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says Justin Trudeau was among those who personally asked that Israel remove hundreds of socalled White Helmets from Syria amid fears they would be attacked by government troops.
Netanyahu revealed the conversations with Canada’s prime minister, U.S. President Donald Trump and other world leaders shortly after a dramatic overnight rescue.
The Israeli military helped the volunteers and their families flee from rebel-held areas in Syria to nearby Jordan.
Jordan confirmed that 800 Syrian citizens have entered its territory to be resettled in Western countries, including Canada.
The volunteers had been stranded along the frontier with the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights following the latest Syrian government offensive in southwestern Syria.
In a statement released early Sunday, Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland pledged Canada’s continued support for the White Helmets.
“Canada, working in close partnership with the United Kingdom and Germany, has been leading an international effort to ensure the safety of White Helmets and their families,” she said.
Praising the White Helmets as “courageous volunteers” who risk their lives to help fellow Syrians targeted by senseless violence, Freeland said, “Canada will continue to provide significant humanitarian assistance to the people affected by this conflict in Syria.”
Canada previously resettled 25,000 Syrian refugees between September 2015 and February 2016.
The White Helmets have been one of the few glimmers of light during the bloody and savage war that has ravaged Syria since 2011, leaving 350,000 people dead and millions more displaced.
The Israeli military said the overnight operation was an “exceptional humanitarian gesture” done at the request of the United States and its allies due to “an immediate threat to the (Syrians’) lives.”
The military said its actions did not reflect a change to Israel’s non-intervention policy in Syria’s war, now in its eighth year, where all the warring parties are considered hostile.
The Syrians would remain in Jordan for three months before moving on to Canada, Britain and Germany, said the Jordanian Foreign Ministry’s spokesperson, Mohammed al-Kayed.
“The request was approved based on pure humanitarian reasons,” he added.
Raed Saleh, head of the Syrian Civil Defence, as the White Helmets are also known, said a number of volunteers and their families were moved from a dangerous, besieged area and had reached Jordan. He did not elaborate on the numbers.
The Associated Press first reported Friday that U.S. officials were finalizing plans to rescue several hundred Syrian civil defence workers and their families from southwest Syria as Russian-backed government forces closed in on the Quneitra province, along the Golan Heights frontier.
The officials said the White Helmets, who have enjoyed backing from the United States and other Western nations for years, were likely to be targeted by Syrian forces as they retook control of the southwest. Evacuation plans were accelerated after last week’s NATO summit in Brussels.
Since the Syrian government offensive began in June, the area along the frontier in the Golan Heights has been the safest in the southwestern region, attracting hundreds of displaced because of its location along the disengagement line with Israel.
Israel has occupied the Golan Heights since 1967.
Thousands of civilians had taken shelter near the frontier to escape the government offensive.
The Syrian government is unlikely to fire there or carry out airstrikes for fear of an Israeli response.
Meanwhile, Syrian forces kept up their offensive, pounding the southern tip of the southwestern region where an Islamic Stateaffiliated group still holds territory.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the bombing — 130 airstrikes since Saturday — displaced 20,000 civilians while an estimated 10,000 remain trapped in the area controlled by the militants, with their fate unknown.
The White Helmets typically have operated in opposition-held areas across Syria, places where government services are almost non-existent, voluntarily risking their lives to save hundreds of civilian lives .
Some Syrians have opted to be evacuated to northern Idlib province, where the opposition still holds territory. Thousands of armed men and their families were moved over the weekend.
Reports said two buses carrying evacuees were held up by a pro-Syrian government militia, apparently after they went off road.
Panicked passengers, fearing for their lives, posted pictures of the militia surrounding their buses on social media.