The Sunday Guardian

SYRIAN WAR-TORN FAMILY RECOUNTS THE WOES

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT COLOMBO

Seham Hamu lost her husband, son and granddaugh­ter on the same night in 2016 when a missile struck their home in Douma, a rebel stronghold near the Syrian capital that saw some of the fiercest fighting of the civil war.

Now, aged 74 and confined to a wheelchair because of a heart condition, she looks after her son’s four surviving children, a widowed daughter and a second daughter along with her husband and their children.

Their plight is not unusual in a country where hundreds of thousands of people have been killed during a decade of violence and millions more forced to flee their homes and settle elsewhere in Syria or abroad.

As the 10th anniversar­y of the start of the conflict in mid-march, 2011, approaches, Hamu just wants to forget.

“I don’t want to remember...it was too cruel,” she said of the war, a multi-sided conflict that sucked in Islamist militants, myriad rebel groups, government troops and foreign forces. Hamu, who was born and bred in Douma, has never left the town, which still shows the scars of the violence.it is back under government control after a Russian-backed military campaign helped President Bashar al-assad force Jaish al-islam, the rebel group which controlled Douma in 2018, to retreat.the aerial bombing campaign that flushed them out followed a years-long siege of hundreds of thousands of residents, many of whom fled.

Some who now want to return from Turkish-held areas in the north are not allowed.douma is part of the Eastern Ghouta region that touches the outskirts of Damascus.

Eastern Ghouta town was where a suspected chemical attack took place in April, 2018 that prompted missile strikes by the United States, France and Britain.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India