Times of Suriname

Syria’s Ghouta residents ‘wait to die’ as bombs fall

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LEBANON - Residents of Syria’s eastern Ghouta district said they were waiting their “turn to die” yesterday, amid one of the most intense bombardmen­ts of the war by pro-government forces on the besieged, rebel-held enclave near Damascus.

At least 10 people died in one village and more than 200 were injured early yesterday. At least 296 people have been killed in the district in the last three days, the British-based Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights war monitor said. Another 13 bodies, including five children, were recovered from the rubble of houses destroyed on Tuesday in the villages of Arbin and Saqba, the Observator­y reported. The eastern Ghouta, a densely populated agricultur­al district on the Damascus outskirts, is the last major area near the capital still under rebel control. Home to 400,000 people, it has been besieged by government forces for years.

A massive escalation in bombardmen­t, including rocket fire, shelling, air strikes and helicopter-dropped barrel bombs, since Sunday has become one of the deadliest of the Syrian civil war, now entering its eighth year.

Reuters photograph­s taken in eastern Ghouta on Wednesday showed men searching through the rubble of smashed buildings, carrying blood-smeared people to hospital and cowering in debris-strewn streets.

The United Nations has denounced the bombardmen­t, which has struck hospitals and other civilian infrastruc­ture, saying such attacks could be war crimes. The pace of the strikes appeared to slacken overnight, but its intensity resumed later on Wednesday morning, the Observator­y said. Pro-government forces fired hundreds of rockets and dropped barrel bombs from helicopter­s on the district’s towns and villages.

“We are waiting our turn to die. This is the only thing I can say,” said Bilal Abu Salah, 22, whose wife is five months pregnant with their first child in the biggest eastern Ghouta town Douma. They fear the terror of the bombardmen­t will bring her into labor early, he said.

(Reuters)

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