Arab News

Opposition’s undergroun­d network unearthed in Syria

- AFP Lataminah/Syria

Tunnels run for hundreds of meters, connecting caves strewn with mattresses that formed what the Syrian army and its Russian allies say was a vast opposition undergroun­d network.

The road leading to the entrance of the tunnels in Lataminah in northweste­rn Syria is lined with the charred shells of cars and armored vehicles.

According to the Russian army, which organized a press tour of the site for dozens of journalist­s, the network of caves dug into a rocky outcrop could shelter up to 5,000 people.

“We think this network was dug about four years ago with sophistica­ted machinery, of a kind which is not available in Syria,” a Syrian army colonel said as he led reporters into the tunnels, escorted by Russian demining experts.

The red-brick entrance to this undergroun­d base still bears the scars of the battle that saw Russian-backed regime forces retake the area in the province of Hama earlier this year. “Those who fought here retreated to the north. First to Khan Sheikhun and then further into Idlib province when our forces took the city,” the colonel said.

In some places, the tunnels are barely big enough to stand in but connect large rooms carved out of the rock, including a prayer room, a drone workshop, a bathroom and even a prison.

Military officials told AFP reporters that the total size of the undergroun­d network, in which crates of amunition were found, has not yet been fully assessed.

It was used primarily by fighters from opposition groups, among them the alliance known as Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham that now dominates the entire Idlib enclave.

The caves provided shelter to those fighters from the intensive air strikes Russian and Syrian aircraft usually conduct as a prelude to any ground advance.

In some of the caves, empty food cans and crumpled plastic water bottles, jerricans and decaying clothes give a glimpse of daily life in the dark hideout.

Some rooms were done up with tile panels and a coat of paint while others have fully cemented walls, over which Syrian forces have since scribbled slogans praising Syria’s Bashar Assad.

 ?? Reuters ?? A boy inspects a damaged site after airstrikes in the Tariq Al-Bab neighborho­od of Aleppo, Syria.
Reuters A boy inspects a damaged site after airstrikes in the Tariq Al-Bab neighborho­od of Aleppo, Syria.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Saudi Arabia