Cape Argus

Fear spreads anew in Syrian capital

Damascus suffers blowback as Assad escalates eastern Ghouta carnage

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AS THE Syrian government escalates its attacks on opposition-held suburbs of Damascus, rebels in outlying towns are retaliatin­g with volleys of mortar shells and rockets into the capital, killing more than 25 civilians in the past two weeks and spreading fear among its 4 million residents.

Many parents have stopped sending their children to school. Some are skipping work and hunkering at home. Some are even contemplat­ing leaving until it all calms down.

The scope of the rebel attacks on Damascus pales in comparison to what has rained down from warplanes on eastern Ghouta, where more than 400 people were killed last week in the region only a short drive from the capital.

But the intensity of the shelling has brought renewed anguish and suffering to the population, shattering a prevailing sense for some time now that the war – or the worst of it – was over.

Issam Dhahi, a 45-year-old resident of the Qassaa neighbourh­ood, said his two children haven’t been to school or university for the past 15 days, and the family only ventures out to buy necessitie­s. The predominan­tly Christian area has been a regular target of random shelling, bringing life to a standstill.

Five people from his neighbourh­ood were wounded last Wednesday and five others were killed since the beginning of February, Dhahi said. Usually packed shops in the mixed commercial and residentia­l district now close at 5pm, so people can get home before dark. “My son’s car was hit with shrapnel. “Today (Sunday), a condolence­s ceremony at a church in Qassaa was cancelled because of fear. Everyone is staying at home,” he said.

President Bashar Assad has consolidat­ed his control over key areas of Syria in recent years with the support of Iran and Russia, but he has been unable to stop the rebels from occasional­ly striking at his seat of power from the sprawling Ghouta suburb. The mortar and rocket attacks stopped almost completely last summer after a Russia-brokered deal was struck with the rebels, designatin­g eastern Ghouta to be a de-escalation zone.

For months until December, Damascus was brimming with life, its cafés and restaurant­s packed with people and its streets jammed with traffic again. There was hope that with Homs, Aleppo and Deir el-Zour back in the government’s control, the conflict was winding to a close.

That sense has been shattered after the government escalated its attacks earlier this month on Ghouta, the only remaining rebel stronghold near the capital. Since February 18, militants in the rebel-held suburbs have hit back hard, sending dozens of shells and rockets to Damascus each day, striking in markets, residentia­l buildings and near schools in the Old City, Qassaa, Bab Touma, Umayyad Square and the suburb of Jaramana.

In three days last week, 17 people were killed, including 13 on Tuesday when 114 shells hit Damascus and its countrysid­e.

Among the dead was Lama Fallouh, a programme officer at the Damascus Opera, who was killed when a shell struck near the landmark Umayyad Square in central Damascus, along with two brothers in their 20s in Jaramana and several children.

“It feels like war all over again,” said a mother of three who asked not to be identified because she feared for her family’s security.

“I get so scared every time my children or husband leave the house, I count the seconds till they’re back.”

In Jaramana, where more than 14 people have been killed since the beginning of the month, streets are deserted.

Ghabi Nakazi, the 60-year-old owner of a clothes factory, said he still goes to work despite safety concerns.

“Nothing will stop me from going,” he said, calling on the army to eliminate what he said were “terrorists” holed up in the nearby suburbs. – AP

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