Bangkok Post

SYRIAN REBELS QUIT GHOUTA AS REGIME NEARS CONTROL

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>> HARASTA: Syrian rebel fighters on Friday left one pocket of battered Eastern Ghouta and reached a deal to quit another as the regime drew close to regaining full control over the key enclave after a more than month-long battle.

A blistering Russian-backed assault since Feb 18 on the last opposition bastion near Damascus had splintered rebel territory into three shrinking pockets, each held by different factions.

Damascus and its ally Moscow have implemente­d a “leave or die” strategy with deadly air strikes on the enclave as they look to end six years of opposition control.

State television said the town of Harasta had “been emptied of terrorists” after a deal that saw fighters from Islamist group Ahrar al-Sham and their families bussed to northweste­rn Idlib province, still largely rebel-held.

The evacuation extended regime dominance to over 90% of the bombed-out Ghouta enclave that the rebels have clung to through years of punishing government siege, a Britain-based war monitor said.

President Bashar al-Assad’s forces looked set to expand their control soon over another key area after Islamist group Faylaq al-Rahman struck a deal to evacuate starting yesterday.

The agreement will see a southern stretch of territory that includes the towns of Zamalka, Arbin and Ain Tarma cleared, while talks are under way over the third and final pocket, around Ghouta’s main town of Douma.

The withdrawal deal came after Russian air strikes using “incendiary munitions” hit the town of Arbin late on Thursday, killing 37 civilians, according to the Britain-based Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights. Reporters saw similar munitions fall on Douma.

But Russia denied it was carrying out any such strikes.

Each one of the three pockets has come under intense bombardmen­t, essentiall­y forcing the rebels who control them to sue for an exit in a tactic commonly used by Mr Assad’s forces in Syria’s seven-year war.

The Observator­y says that more than 1,600 civilians have been killed in just over a month.

Harasta’s evacuation — which began on Thursday — came as part of a deal negotiated by Russia.

Syrian state media reported more than 4,500 people including over 1,400 fighters left.

Fighters and civilians on Friday loaded onto a fleet of 50 buses in a buffer zone outside their former bastion before beginning the journey to Idlib.

The head of the rebel-controlled local council in Harasta, Hossam al-Beiruti, described a pitiful scene as he and other residents readied to leave their town.

“They came out from under the rubble. They came out of cellars they had been buried in without food,” he said by phone.

“They emerged back to life despite their feelings of abandonmen­t by the internatio­nal community.”

The first batch of fighters to leave Ghouta arrived at a camp in Idlib province on Friday after spending the night on the edge of rebel-held territory.

“Our situation in Harasta was very tragic,” Abu Mohammed, a civilian told reporters in the town of Maarat al-Ikhwan.

“We couldn’t live above ground because of the heavy bombardmen­t … Some children stayed in basements for four months with no food.”

Retaking Eastern Ghouta, a sprawling semi-rural area which had escaped government control since 2012 and lies within mortar range of central Damascus, was made a priority this year after a string of regime gains.

On the regime-held side of Harasta, a correspond­ent said Syrian soldiers fired celebrator­y gunshots into the air after they heard of the deal to evacuate the second pocket of the enclave.

Ahrar al-Sham had made some demands in talks before the evacuation but were pummelled into accepting whatever conditions were imposed to them.

Some 80 civilians were killed on Thursday in bombardmen­ts of the territory held by Faylaq al-Rahman before they sealed a deal for some 7,000 people to leave.

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