Gulf News

Party cups as gas masks: Idlib civilians prepare for battle

Last rebel enclave’s residents have been preparing dugout shelters for months

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Hudhayfa Al Shahad strapped a colourful paper cup filled with cotton and charcoal to a child’s face and tightened a plastic bag around his head: an improvised gas mask if chemicals once again fall on Syria’s Idlib.

Civilians in Syria’s last major stronghold of active opposition to President Bashar Al Assad’s rule are preparing food and digging shelters ahead of an expected army offensive.

“We are preparing what little we can: small primitive masks we can place on our children’s mouths in case we are hit with chemicals,” Shahad, 20, told Reuters from his village south of Idlib city, where he shares a house with his pregnant wife, three children and around 15 other people.

His brother, constructi­on worker Ahmed Abdul Kareem Al Shahad, 35, shows off the cavernous space under a cool, vine-covered courtyard the family has been digging and sheltering in from bombardmen­t since 2012.

“Military preparatio­ns as we have seen are in full swing ...We as civilians have started preparing the caves,” he said, showing glass bottles of pickled vegetables shelved on the damp cave walls. Around three million people live in the rebel stronghold in northwest Syria, which comprises most of Idlib province and adjacent small parts of Latakia, Hama and Aleppo provinces.

About half of them fled fighting or were transferre­d there by the regime under surrender deals from other parts of Syria as Al Assad has steadily taken back territory from rebels.

Their last refuge

In April last year, a regime warplane dropped sarin on Khan Sheikhoun in Idlib, killing more than 80 civilians, the UN Commission of Inquiry has said. It also said Syrian forces have used chemical weapons, including chlorine, more than two dozen times in the war.

Some people suspected an offensive may be avoided.

“I do not believe there will be an attack on Idlib. It’s all a media war,” said former constructi­on worker Jaafar Abu Ahmed from a rural area near Ma’arat Al Nuaman town. “The great world powers have pre-agreed on us and divided the land.” Neverthele­ss, seven years of war have taught Ahmed to be prepared. His family is expanding a damp dugout they have been digging and sheltering in from strikes for the past five years, stocking it with food.

“This cave is now our protection,” he said. With shelling, air strikes and rhetoric about an impending offensive increasing, local councils across Idlib have come together and asked Turkey for protection.

Idlib is often described as the “last refuge” for rebels and internally displaced civilians. “As for escaping towards the (Turkish) border, I don’t believe we will move from our houses. There is no place left after Idlib,” said Ahmed Al Shahad. “We will fight to the last man, we no longer have any option.”

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 ?? Reuters ?? A boy tries on an improvised gas mask made using paper cup, plastic wrapper, cotton and charcoal to face a possible chemical assault in Idlib on Monday.
Reuters A boy tries on an improvised gas mask made using paper cup, plastic wrapper, cotton and charcoal to face a possible chemical assault in Idlib on Monday.
 ?? Reuters ?? Pickled vegetables stored as emergency rations in an undergroun­d cave in Idlib on Monday.
Reuters Pickled vegetables stored as emergency rations in an undergroun­d cave in Idlib on Monday.

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