Weekend Herald

140,000 displaced in three days

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More than 140,000 Syrians have been displaced in the past three days alone by violence in the country’s northwest, bringing the total of those uprooted in a Syrian government offensive against the last opposition stronghold to more than 800,000, the United Nations said yesterday.

The US said at least 60 per cent of the more than 800,000 displaced since December 1 are children. The humanitari­an crisis in the already overcrowde­d opposition-held enclave is compounded by freezing weather conditions, and existing severe needs.

The government offensive, backed by Russia, has intensifie­d and expanded to include southern and eastern Idlib province as well as southern and western Aleppo, an area home to an estimated 4 million people. Most have already been displaced from other parts of Syria because of the ongoing conflict.

The humanitari­an situation for people in northwest Syria is “at the most critical points,” the UN said, adding that the massive scale of human displaceme­nt over such a short period of time has increased needs exponentia­lly.

David Swanson, UN regional spokespers­on for the crisis in Syria, said more resources, including funding, are immediatel­y needed to save lives and alleviate suffering, predicting the 800,000 figure will rise in the coming days as the government offensive continues.

“This level of displaceme­nt couldn’t come at a worse time as more and more people are squeezed into an increasing­ly smaller area of land with little more than the clothes on their back,” he said, describing people fleeing in the middle of the night to avoid detection in temperatur­es below zero.

“The crisis is deepening by the minute, but the internatio­nal community remains indifferen­t,” Swanson added.

Government forces, with Russian support, have focused their offensive on areas along a strategic highway that runs through opposition territory and connects the country’s south to the north. The M5 highway, now secured by Syrian troops, had been out of government control since 2012 and accessing it was part of a now failed 2018 ceasefire agreement.

Yesterday government troops continued to advance through the Aleppo countrysid­e to secure their hold on the highway. Most of the villages and towns that sit alongside the highway are now empty, while hundreds of thousands are squeezing into displaceme­nt camps, open fields and tents to move away from the front lines.

The UN said 550,000 of the displaced are living in Idlib towns and villages already packed with displaced people. Another 250,000 have moved to northern Aleppo in areas administer­ed by Turkey and allied Syrian groups.

Turkey, a sponsor of the ceasefire and a backer of the opposition, has sent thousands of troops into the area to stall the advances, sparking rare direct confrontat­ions with Syrian troops.

The Syrian war, now in its ninth year, has pulled in internatio­nal players including the US, Russia and Turkey. Russia has supported the Syrian government troops while the US has led an internatio­nal coalition fighting Islamic State group militants.

Also on yesterday, the US military acknowledg­ed its troops fired on and killed a Syrian combatant when government supporters attacked an American convoy in northeaste­rn Syria a day earlier.

The clash on Thursday was a rare direct confrontat­ion between a Syrian pro-government group and US troops deployed in the increasing­ly crowded terrain near the border with Iraq and Turkey.

A convoy of US armoured vehicles drove into a government­controlled area and was attacked by pro-government supporters, including armed men who fired at the soldiers and pelted them with stones and Molotov cocktails.

 ?? Photos / AP ?? Hundreds of thousands of Syrians have fled, seeking shelter from harsh winter weather in muddy tents and half-constructe­d buildings.
Photos / AP Hundreds of thousands of Syrians have fled, seeking shelter from harsh winter weather in muddy tents and half-constructe­d buildings.

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