Rebels quit Ghouta as government gets control
SYRIA: A rebel faction trapped by government forces outside the Syrian capital Damascus agreed to evacuate to northern Syria yesterday as reports swirled of a larger agreement that would have the government retake full control of the eastern Ghouta region after seven years of revolt.
Fighters from the Faylaq alrahman group left Douma on buses sent by the Syrian government to the rebel-held province of Idlib. Some 1300 fighters, activists, and civilians signed up to leave the town, according to the Britainbased Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitoring group.
It was the first organised evacuation of fighters from Douma, one of the earliest centres of the antigovernment demonstrations that swept through the country in 2011. Security forces responded by putting the town and other suburbs around Damascus under siege, bombing hospitals and residential areas, and blocking the entry of food and medical relief.
Douma is a stronghold of the powerful Army of Islam rebel group. The town is one of the last around the capital to hold out against the government.
Later yesterday, a media outlet linked to the Syrian military reported that the Army of Islam also agreed to leave to north Syria, effectively transferring control of Douma to Damascus.
The deal would mark the end of a weeks-long push by the government to consolidate its control of the eastern Ghouta region just outside the capital.
Fighters from the Army of Islam would evacuate to Jarablus, a town in the northern Aleppo province that is shared between rebel and Turkish control. Turkey, with support from rebels, is running its own military operations against a United States-backed Kurdish party that controls territory along the frontier.
A local council for Douma would be formed with the approval of the central government, said the government-linked Central Military Media outlet.
Russia’s military also said a preliminary agreement has been reached on the evacuation of Army of Islam fighters. -AP