Gulf News

Ghouta operation nearly over, Russia says

Thousands of rebels have accepted deals to leave other parts of the enclave in the past week

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The massive Russianbac­ked Syrian military offensive in suburbs east of Damascus is almost over, with rebels holed up in just a single town after abandoning the rest of the eastern Ghouta enclave, Moscow said yesterday.

A senior official for Jaish Al Islam, the faction that controls the last Ghouta town still in insurgent hands, Douma, said the group was still engaged in negotiatio­ns with Russia over the town’s fate, which began several days ago.

Thousands of rebels have accepted Russian-brokered deals to leave other parts of the enclave in the past week with their families on government­supplied buses, giving them safe passage to other insurgenth­eld areas. Tens of thousands of other civilians have stayed behind to accept state rule, and tens of thousands more have fled across the frontline.

The collapse of rebel control in eastern Ghouta, after one of the fiercest campaigns of the seven year war, has delivered the insurgents their worst defeat since they were driven out of Aleppo in 2016.

Speaking at a weekly briefing, Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoma­n Maria Zakharova said the “counter-terrorist operation” in eastern Ghouta had nearly finished, RIA state news agency reported.

Eastern Ghouta, an early centre of the 2011 uprising against President Bashar Al Assad, was until last month the biggest and most populous remaining rebel stronghold near the capital.

Battlefiel­d victories

Its capture will cap a string of battlefiel­d victories for the government of President Bashar Al Assad since Russia sent its air force to join his war effort against the rebellion in September 2015, making his position unassailab­le. A commander in the alliance supporting Al Assad, which besides Russia includes Iran and Shiite militias from Lebanon and Iraq, said on Wednesday negotiatio­ns with Jaish Al Islam had stopped.

However, Jaish Al Islam official Mohammad Alloush, who is based outside Syria, told Reuters by text message that talks were continuing, “despite reports of threats and provocatio­ns in order to put pressure on civilians”.

Despite some artillery fire on Douma on Wednesday, there has been no renewal of the army’s withering bombardmen­t and assault that stormed most of the rebel enclave in just a few weeks.

It split eastern Ghouta into three parts, and the rebels in two of them agreed surrender terms a week ago including the choice of accepting Al Assad’s rule or leaving with light weapons for opposition territory in northweste­rn Syria.

Daily convoys of buses have since made the 320km journey to Idlib carrying about 7,500 fighters and their families, 30,000 people in all, according to the Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights, a Britain-based war monitor.

About 134,000 other people fled across front lines from rebel territory in eastern Ghouta into areas held by the government, the Observator­y said.

Some 40,000 people remained in the towns it has recaptured so far.

‘Dire’ conditions

Yesterday, the United Nations resident and humanitari­an coordinato­r’s office in Syria said in an emailed update that 75,000 civilians had been received in shelters and 47,000 civilians remained in them. It described conditions in the shelters — mostly unfinished buildings, hangars or schools — as “dire”.

Al Assad and his allies say their offensive was needed to end the rule of Islamist militants over civilians and to stop rebel mortar fire on Damascus, which state television says has killed dozens in recent weeks. The Observator­y says the government assault has killed more than 1,600 people.

 ?? AFP ?? ■ A boy who was evacuated from the rebel-held town of Harasta in Eastern Ghouta looks at a woman in a camp for displaced people in Maaret Al Ikhwan, in Idlib, yesterday.
AFP ■ A boy who was evacuated from the rebel-held town of Harasta in Eastern Ghouta looks at a woman in a camp for displaced people in Maaret Al Ikhwan, in Idlib, yesterday.

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