The Jerusalem Post

Eyewitness­es: Civilians helping Assad use Russian military base

Hezbollah: Enclave northeast of Damascus free of rebels • FMs from Russia, Turkey, Iran to meet in Moscow on Saturday to discuss Syria

- • By MARIA TSVETKOVA and ANTON ZVEREV

MOLKINO, Russia/BEIRUT/ MOSCOW (Reuters) – The Kremlin says it has nothing to do with Russian civilians fighting in Syria but on three recent occasions groups of men flying in from Damascus headed straight to a Defense Ministry base in Molkino, Reuters reporters witnessed.

Molkino in southweste­rn Russia is where the Russian 10th Special Forces Brigade is based, according to informatio­n on the Kremlin website.

The destinatio­n of the Russians arriving from Syria provides rare evidence of a covert Russian mission in Syria beyond the air strikes, training of Syrian forces and small numbers of special forces troops acknowledg­ed by Moscow.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on February 14 Russians may be in Syria but “they are not part of the armed forces of the Russian Federation.” He referred Reuters to the Defense Ministry when asked why civilians fighting in Syria return to a military base. The ministry did not immediatel­y respond.

A duty officer at the 10th special forces brigade, asked why non-military people were entering the military base, said: “Nobody enters it, as far as I am aware... You’ve seen them, okay. But you should not believe everything... You can maybe. But how can we comment on what other organizati­ons do?”

More than 2,000 Russian contractor­s are fighting to help Syrian forces recapture land from their opponents, several sources, including one contractor, have said.

The contractor­s are transferre­d by Syrian airline Cham Wings, the sources said.

Reuters reporters saw a Syrian Cham Wings charter flight from Damascus land at the civilian airport in Rostov-onDon on April 17 and watched groups of men leave the terminal through an exit separate from the one used by ordinary passengers.

They boarded three buses, which took them to an area mainly used by airport staff. A luggage carrier brought numerous oversized bags and the men, dressed in civilian clothes, got off the buses, loaded the bags and got back on.

The three buses then left the airport in convoy and headed south; two made stops near cafes along the way and one on the roadside. All three reached the village of Molkino, 350 km. south, shortly before midnight.

In the village, each bus paused for a minute or two at a checkpoint manned by at least two servicemen, before driving on. About 15-20 minutes later the buses drove back through the checkpoint empty. Publicly available satellite maps show the road leads to the military facility.

The buses took men along the same route from the airport to Molkino on March 25 and April 6, a Reuters reporter saw.

Several relatives, friends and recruiters of fighters told Reuters Russian private contractor­s have had a training camp in Molkino since the time they fought in eastern Ukraine alongside pro-Russian separatist­s.

The military facility is known for its recently renovated firing range, where the military trains for counter terrorist operations, tank battles and sniper shooting, the Russian Defense Ministry website says.

Reuters contacted the owners of some of the buses transporti­ng the groups of men from the airport. They said they rent out their buses but declined to say who to: One said a trip to Molkino could have been an excursion.

One of the buses, a white 33-year-old Neoplan with a slogan of a tourist company on its boards, was imported into Russia in 2007 and initially registered in the town of Pechory. Dmitry Utkin, identified by three sources as leader of the contractor­s, previously commanded a special forces unit based in Pechory.

Back in the Middle East, a media unit run by Hezbollah said on Wednesday that an opposition enclave northeast of Damascus was now free of rebels and under state control.

Under a deal between the Syrian government and rebels reached on Friday, about 3,700 rebels and family members left the East Qalamoun enclave some 40 km. northeast of Damascus in recent days.

The final 38 buses left at dawn on Wednesday, the media unit said. Their destinatio­n was the rebel-held areas of Idlib and Jarablus in northern Syria, Syrian state television said.

Only one pocket of rebel-held territory remains near the Syrian capital, an area south of the city where Islamic State holds a pocket next to one held by rebel factions.

Pro-government forces are bombarding the enclave, which includes the Yarmouk Palestinia­n refugee camp, Hajar al-Aswad district and neighborin­g areas.

In a sign of the state’s control of the Qalamoun area, Syrian security forces began deploying in several villages there on Wednesday.

State television showed footage of convoys of police cars and motorcycle­s entering the village of Ruhaiba, with dozens of civilians gathering and cheering in the streets.

Syrian President Bashar Assad, backed by Russia and Iran, has sought to wipe out the last few rebel enclaves near Damascus. In early April, Assad took control of the largest rebel-held area near Damascus, eastern Ghouta.

Meanwhile, the foreign ministers of Russia, Turkey and Iran will meet on April 28 to discuss Syria in Moscow, the Interfax news agency reported on Wednesday, citing a source at Russia’s Foreign Ministry.

 ?? (Reuters) ?? A STILL IMAGE from video footage taken on April 17 shows a bus carrying Russian military contractor­s near Rostov-on-Don on its way to a base in Molkino, Russia.
(Reuters) A STILL IMAGE from video footage taken on April 17 shows a bus carrying Russian military contractor­s near Rostov-on-Don on its way to a base in Molkino, Russia.

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