Gulf News

Regime looks set to assault Yarmouk camp

FALL OF LAST REBEL ENCLAVE NEAR CAPITAL WILL GIVE AL ASSAD FULL CONTROL OVER DAMASCUS

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The Syrian regime’s army began preparator­y shelling for an assault on the last area outside its control near Damascus yesterday, a commander in the proregime alliance said, building on its recent capture of the major suburb of Eastern Ghouta.

Recovering the Yarmouk camp and neighbouri­ng areas located south of the city would give Bashar Al Assad complete control over Syria’s capital, further consolidat­ing his grip on power.

Yarmouk, Syria’s biggest camp for Palestinia­n refugees since the mid-20th century, has been under the control of Daesh for several years. Although the vast majority of residents have fled, the United Nations says thousands remain.

Al Assad has benefited from Russian air power since 2015 to regain large swathes of Syria, putting him in his strongest position since the early months of the seven-year-old war.

After the recapture of Eastern Ghouta, Al Assad still has several smaller pockets of ground to recover from rebels, as well as two major areas they hold in the northwest and southwest.

Besides the pocket south of Damascus, rebels still hold besieged enclaves in the town of Dumayr northeast of Damascus, in the Eastern Qalamoun mountains nearby, and around Rastan north of Homs.

In northwest Syria, the largest area still held by rebels, a regime assault could bring Damascus into confrontat­ion with Turkey, which has set up a string of military observatio­n posts in the area.

Syrian regime media reported that missiles had again targeted an airbase overnight, but a commander in the regional military alliance backing the regime later told Reuters it was a false alarm.

The commander, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the new offensive would target Daesh and Nusra Front militants in Yarmouk camp and Al Hajar Al Aswad district.

Propaganda exposed

Meanwhile, Factuel, an AFP fact-checking blog, revealed that photograph­s which claim to show Syrian volunteer rescue workers, known as the White Helmets, staging a chemical attack in Eastern Ghouta were actually taken from a film set.

The White Helmets, a humanitari­an organisati­on made up of some 3,000 volunteers, has regularly been the target of disinforma­tion campaigns by the Syrian regime and conspiracy theorists online.

The photos – which show actors covered in dust, with bloody makeup and a clapper board – were presented by supporters of Al Assad as proof that the gas attack in Douma on April 7 was fake. But the photos come from the set of a Syrian film called Revolution Man, supported by the regime’s culture ministry, and were published in February on a Facebook page devoted to the movie. The film’s premiere was also reported by the regime’s news agency SANA on March 9 – a month before the alleged chemical attack.

Widespread destructio­n

In Douma, there’s widespread destructio­n and traumatise­d residents who recalled months spent cowering in crowded undergroun­d shelters infested with lice, with barely any food or water during the regime’s indiscrimi­nate bombing. Except for the Russian and Syrian regime troops patrolling the streets, few people could be seen in Douma, the majority of its residents now displaced to rebel-held areas to the north.

The main hospital, courthouse and municipal buildings were largely reduced to rubble, while the nearby Grand Mosque, famed for its towering arches, white dome and majestic palm trees was riddled with bullet and shell holes — testimony to the intense regime assault the town was subjected to since being seized by the rebels six years ago.

Douma was one of the first areas to rise up against Al Assad’s regime and until a few weeks ago it was a major threat to his seat of power in Damascus.

 ?? AP ?? A street full of destroyed buildings in the town of Douma, the site of a suspected chemical weapons attack, near Damascus.
AP A street full of destroyed buildings in the town of Douma, the site of a suspected chemical weapons attack, near Damascus.

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