Khaleej Times

ALEPPO IS LICKING ITS WOUNDS A YEAR AFTER ASSAD’S VICTORY rows of flattened buildings are a constant reminder of the deadly war

- AFP

The streets of Kalasseh, a neighbourh­ood of Aleppo formerly held by rebels, are jammed with traffic again and its pavements are packed with people and overflowin­g market stalls.

But the rows of flattened buildings flanking them are a constant reminder of the devastatin­g battle that had reduced a city that was one of the jewels of the Middle East to ruins by the time Syrian government forces retook it a year ago.

“It’s crowded. People are coming back,” says Khayro Moselmani, a former taxi driver from the neighbourh­ood.

Miles away in Idlib province, Mohammed Assaf, a supporter of the rebellion against President Bashar Al Assad, is still grieving the “tragic” day he had to flee his Aleppo home.

December 22, 2016 was a turning point in the Syrian conflict: after four years of relentless fighting that gutted the city and killed thousands of civilians, government forces retook control.

It was the beginning of the end for the rebels, who went on to relinquish most of their bastions to regime forces backed by Russia, whose formidable firepower tipped the balance.

The eastern part of Aleppo that was the rebels’ stronghold was levelled by Russian and Syrian air strikes.

Months of siege left tens of thousands of people starving and in need of medical attention, and eventually led to their evacuation just a few days before the regime took full control.

A year on, life is slowly returning to the city. Water and electricit­y are back in most areas, the mountains of rubble are being trucked away, the streets cleaned and resurfaced.

Moselmani fled Aleppo in the summer of 2012 as rebels took over the city’s east, and moved to Tartus, a coastal town in the heartland of the Alawite community to which Assad belongs.

He returned to his hometown a month after the government took it back and found his home had been destroyed. “At the time we came back, it was almost unthinkabl­e to see a single person in the neighbourh­ood,” the sexagenari­an, who now sells grilled meat on the street, remembered.

“Now, they are coming in and out... Thank god, there is security.”

The activity on the streets offers a stark contrast with last year’s eerie, post-apocalypti­c pictures of deserted districts in one of the oldest continuous­ly inhabited cities in the world. On one thoroughfa­re, workers are trying to fill a gaping hole in the side of a building. Further down, some recently returned residents have had to make do with temporary plastic sheeting to replace their collapsed roof. “At the time of the rebels, it was starvation,” said Salah Moghayer, a resident of the Salhin neighbourh­ood who used to work in a hammam.

Like thousands of other residents, he was evacuated at the end of the siege and returned in early 2017. “The hammam was destroyed. As soon as it is repaired, I will take my old job back,” said the father of three daughters, who now works as a porter.

Unofficial estimates say around 500,000 people, about half of east Aleppo’s population, have returned.

Fabrice Balanche, a visiting fellow at Stanford University’s Hoover Institutio­n, warned however that the rebirth of what was Syria’s commercial hub is still a long way away.

He said the looting of the industrial zone and the flight of Aleppo’s business community has crippled the city.

“They are in Gaziantep (Turkey), where they have rebuilt their factories and brought all their workers with them. They have no intention of returning,” he said. The city was reunited a year ago but the divide has not been erased.

West Aleppo was also damaged but not nearly as much as the city’s east, where many residents who lived under the rebels are too scared to come back.

“I haven’t made any plans to go back because with a president who is a despot and oppresses people, it’s just not possible,” said Mohammed Louai. “I would surely be arrested.”

The 22-year-old now lives in the neighbouri­ng province of Idlib, where many of Aleppo’s routed rebels and their supporters fled.

“It was as if someone was tearing

I haven’t made any plans to go back because with a president who is a despot and oppresses people, it’s just not possible. I would surely be arrested. Mohammed Louai

your heart out. We were in shock for six months,” he said.

Mohammed Assaf, a young man of the same age, was one of the Aleppo-based rebels forced to relocate to Idlib a year ago.

“We’d rather not remember that day. Even with a one per cent chance to free Aleppo, we were happy to stay.” —

 ?? AFP ?? Syrians march during a government celebratio­n marking the first anniversar­y of the retaking of the second Syrian city in its square of Saadallah Al Jabiri.—
AFP Syrians march during a government celebratio­n marking the first anniversar­y of the retaking of the second Syrian city in its square of Saadallah Al Jabiri.—
 ?? AFP ?? Syrian Khayro Moselmani stands at his destroyed house in the former rebel-held Kalasse neighbourh­ood in the northern Syrian city of Aleppo. —
AFP Syrian Khayro Moselmani stands at his destroyed house in the former rebel-held Kalasse neighbourh­ood in the northern Syrian city of Aleppo. —

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