Kuwait Times

Rebel fighters and families leave besieged Syria district

Deal brings Assad in control of all Homs city

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Syrian rebels started leaving the last opposition-held district of Homs city yesterday in the final phase of an evacuation deal that will bring an early centre of the uprising back under government control in the conflict’s seventh year. Fighters took with them their light weapons, as agreed, and boarded buses along with women and children. Many were headed for insurgent-held Idlib province in Syria’s northwest, or the town of Jarablus on the border with Turkey. At least four buses had left Al-Waer by mid-afternoon, and dozens more were expected to follow, to bring more than 2,500 people out of the district long besieged by government forces and their allies in the country’s civil war.

The evacuation of Al-Waer is one of the largest of its kind. It follows a number of similar deals in recent months that have brought many parts of western Syria long held by the opposition and besieged by government and allied forces back under President Bashar Al-Assad’s control. Syria’s government calls the evacuation deals, which have also taken place in besieged areas around Damascus, and in Aleppo at the end of last year, reconcilia­tion agreements. It says they allow services and security to be restored.

The opposition has criticized the agreements, however, saying they amount to forced displaceme­nt of Assad’s opponents away from Syria’s main urban centers, often after years of siege and bombardmen­t. The United Nations has criticized both the use of siege tactics which precede such deals and the evacuation­s themselves as amounting to forcible displaceme­nt. The AlWaer deal, backed by Syria’s ally Russia, began to be implemente­d in March. Thousands of people have left in a several stages. By the time it is completed, up to 20,000 people will have left the district, the British-based Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights monitoring group says.

Homs Governor Talal Barazi said the final phase of the evacuation would last some 20 hours, and expected it to be completed today. “This is the last day. The number of militants expected (to leave) is around 700. With their families the total number could be around 3,000,” he told reporters in Al-Waer. Barazi said at least 20,000 inhabitant­s remained in Al-Waer, and tens of thousands displaced during fighting would begin to return to the neighborho­od after the deal was completed. “Over the next few weeks communicat­ions networks will return” as well as electricit­y and water, he said.

Russian military police

As in other evacuation deals, some rebels have decided to stay in Al-Waer and hand over their weapons as Syria’s military and its allies move in. Young men of conscripti­on age will be required to join the armed forces for military service. A Russian officer helping oversee the deal’s implementa­tion told reporters Russian military police would help with the transition inside al-Waer.

“Russia has a guarantor role in this agreement. Russian military police will stay, and will carry out duties inside the district,” Sergei Druzhin said through an Arabic interprete­r. Assad’s government, backed militarily since 2015 by Russia and since early on in the war by Iranian-backed militias, has negotiated the pacts from a position of strength and brought Syria’s major urban areas in the west back under its control. Homs, Syria’s third-largest city before the conflict, was an early centre of the popular uprising against Assad in 2011 that turned into a civil war which has killed hundreds of thousands of people and displaced more than 11 million.

The government is bringing more areas under its control, especially around Damascus. yesterday, state television reported that more than 2,500 people including 1,000 rebels had left the Damascus district of Barzeh under another ongoing agreement. Rebels groups, some supported by Western countries, Gulf Arab states and Turkey, still hold pockets of territory around Damascus and in the south, as well as almost all of Idlib province. Many people leaving under the evacuation deals head for Idlib. Islamic State holds swathes of territory in the east of Syria, and is being fought by separate forces, including US-backed fighters and Russian-backed Syrian troops. — Reuters

 ??  ?? HOMS, Syria: Syrian opposition fighters board a bus at a checkpoint manned by regime forces ahead of their evacuation from Waer neighborho­od, the last opposition-held district in the central city of Homs. — AFP
HOMS, Syria: Syrian opposition fighters board a bus at a checkpoint manned by regime forces ahead of their evacuation from Waer neighborho­od, the last opposition-held district in the central city of Homs. — AFP

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