Weekend Herald

Defeated rebels leave Syrian enclave

Evacuation brings Assad closer to ending years of rebellion around the capital

- Bassem Mroue and Zeina Karam

Carrying their light arms, hundreds of defeated rebels have begun evacuating with their families from a devastated town in eastern Ghouta, an effective surrender under a deal with the Government after a long siege and bombing campaign of the enclave on the outskirts of Damascus.

The departure of the powerful Ahrar al-Sham group — the first such arrangemen­t for eastern Ghouta — could serve as a blueprint for fighters in other towns, bringing President Bashar al-Assad’s Government closer to ending years of rebellion in the territory just east of the capital.

As night fell, Syrian TV showed dozens of white buses carrying opposition fighters and civilians pulling out in a long convoy after being parked all day on a main highway. Among the

1580 evacuees from the town of Harasta were 413 gunmen, it said.

Earlier, a few fighters with automatic rifles slung on their shoulders were seen milling around the buses. As the sun set, a group of rebels knelt on the Harasta highway and prayed.

Ahrar al-Sham is a powerful, ultraconse­rvative Islamic group in Syria. It is one of the smaller rebel groups based in eastern Ghouta — and the first to acknowledg­e defeat. Under the agreement with the Assad Government, the group’s fighters and their relatives will leave their base in the town of Harasta and head to opposition-controlled Idlib in northern Syria.

The deal will see 1500 rebels and

6000 civilians depart, according to the state-affiliated Military Media Centre.

The convoy of buses from Harasta, their headlights blazing, was reminiscen­t of those ferrying defeated rebels out of eastern Aleppo in late

2016, following a similar agreement with the Government.

“They are leaving toward Idlib with no return,” said Rabieh Dibeh, correspond­ent for state-affiliated alIkhbariy­a TV, when the buses started moving.

The deal is modelled on others that have had rebels surrender swathes of territory around the capital and other major cities to the Government.

In all cases, the arrangemen­ts followed indiscrimi­nate bombing campaigns against hospitals, markets and other civilian targets, driving thousands from their homes.

As Ahrar al-Sham rebels prepared to leave Harasta, thousands of civilians streamed out of other areas in eastern Ghouta that were still being bombed by the Government.

Dozens of the civilians appeared to be wounded, some hobbling on crutches, another with an eye injury. Several children were seen crying in fear. A girl who appeared to be younger than 10, wearing a yellow dress, struggled to walk while carrying a toddler and some belongings.

The government assault has sparked a tide of people trying to escape the violence in the Damascus suburbs. Some have moved deeper into the rebel-held enclave, while about 50,000 others have crossed the frontlines toward government­controlled areas.

The air and ground assault, which has escalated since February 18, has seen the once-sprawling territory at the edge of the capital shrink to three disconnect­ed rebel-held islands. That has made it only a question of when — not if — the Russian-backed government forces would recapture the entire region.

Meanwhile, the media arm of Lebanon’s Hizbollah group and the Britain-based Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights monitoring group said the second-largest rebel group in eastern Ghouta, Failaq al-Rahman, has declared a ceasefire in order to negotiate leaving the area.

There was no immediate comment from Failaq al-Rahman. Hizbollah is fighting alongside Assad’s forces.

The internatio­nal medical charity Doctors Without Borders said the advancing government forces had captured or destroyed 19 of the 20 hospitals the group was supporting only a week ago. Medical workers were fleeing the approachin­g frontlines, it said.

Rebels now hold only one-fifth of the territory they controlled a month ago in eastern Ghouta, according to the Observator­y. But that territory includes several densely populated residentia­l zones, including Douma, the largest town in the enclave.

Iyad Abdelaziz, a member of Douma’s local council, said a civilian committee representi­ng the town was in talks with the Russians to reach a settlement. He said the committee had presented a proposal to the Russians for their forces to enter the town, while residents stay in place and restore state institutio­ns there. Abdelaziz said he did not have further details.

“Until now, there’s been no response from the Russians, but today we received a reply of rockets and bombs,” he said.

Commenting on the evacuation­s from Harasta, Douma-based Syrian opposition activist Haitham Bakkar accused the Government of forcefully removing its opponents from some areas and replacing them with Assad supporters.

“This is a demographi­c change par excellence,” he said.

Rebels and the Government exchanged 18 prisoners ahead of the Harasta evacuation, according to progovernm­ent media.

The 13 men released by the rebels identified themselves to the media outside Harasta as soldiers and civilians attached to the Syrian army who were captured in the fighting for the town. Crying in relief, they thanked God, the Syrian army and Assad for their freedom.

Monther Fares, a spokesman for the rebel faction Ahrar al-Sham, confirmed that his group’s fighters were preparing to depart. Fares said the rebels agreed to leave because of “civilian pressure” resulting from intense airstrikes and “warplanes that do not leave the sky”, adding that Thousands of civilians took advantage of the evacuation­s to escape other areas in eastern Ghouta. Harasta residents have spent the last three months in shelters.

But the arrangemen­t leaves other fighters for the Failaq al-Rahman group still inside. The Government is threatenin­g to move on them if they do not also agree to depart.

In violence elsewhere, an airstrike on a market in the village of Harem in northweste­rn Syria killed at least 28 people, according to observers and the Civil Defence group.

The Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights said the dead included 11 children and women, and the overall death toll could rise since many others were critically wounded.

The Syrian Civil Defence, also known as White Helmets, said the airstrike killed 37, mostly women or children.

Harem is in Idlib province, which is mostly controlled by rebels and has been subjected to intense airstrikes recently. AP

 ?? Picture / AP ??
Picture / AP

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