Gulf News

Idlib inundated with Ghouta evacuees

Hundreds of rebel fighters, their relatives and civilians reach town after all-night journey

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Thousands of Syrian rebels and civilians arrived in opposition territory yesterday after having evacuated their Eastern Ghouta enclave near Damascus, an AFP correspond­ent said.

Buses carrying opposition fighters, their relatives, and other civilians began arriving at a transit point in northweste­rn Syria around dawn, after travelling all night from Ghouta.

Aid groups could be seen handing out toys, milk and juice to children descending from the buses.

The convoy that left a battered pocket of Ghouta late Tuesday comprised 101 buses carrying 6,432 people, according to state news agency SANA.

They left under an evacuation deal between the Islamist rebel faction Faylaq Al Rahman, which controls a part of Ghouta, and Russia, an ally of Syrian President Bashar Al Assad.

Moscow has negotiated two such agreements to empty the last rebel holdouts in Eastern Ghouta, once the opposition’s strategic perch on the edge of the capital.

The negotiatio­ns come after a ferocious Syrian army offensive that overran vast swathes of Ghouta, already suffering a crippling halfdecade siege.

The agreement with Faylaq Al Rahman was announced on Friday and implementa­tion began the following day.

30,000 could leave

So far, more than 19,000 people, including rebels and civilians, have been bused out of the part of Ghouta they control.

Faylaq Al Rahman spokesman Wael Alwan said the operation could see as many as 30,000 ultimately leave the enclave.

According to Syrian state media, hundreds more people were boarding buses in the Faylaq-held pocket of Ghouta yesterday for new evacuation­s.

It said more than 128,000 people had fled Ghouta in recent weeks, many of them through routes into government-held territory that were opened by advancing government troops.

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