The National - News

A father looks for his boy in the rubble of Eastern Ghouta

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Abu Mohammed Alaya stands on top of a pile of rubble, searching for the body for his eldest son more than a week after an air strike destroyed their home in Syria’s Eastern Ghouta.

Mr Alaya believes Mohammed, 22, is buried somewhere underneath, a victim of a war that he says has already killed every member of the football team with whom his son used to play.

“All he knew was sport and work,” he said. “Now the whole team, him and his friends, are in the ground. They took him away from us.”

Mr Alaya, 50, breaks into tears as he describes his desperate attempts to lift concrete slabs with his bare hands.

“It took me two days to break up this piece under your feet. How am I supposed to lift it?”

He thinks his brother Ramez lies dead near his son.

“The most important thing is to get them out,” Mr Alaya said. “We are waiting for the equipment and for the shelling to ease so we can get them out and bury them. Are we at the point where someone can’t even be buried after dying?”

The February 22 air strike in the town of Douma also killed his brother’s wife and their daughter, 9. Their bodies were thrown far from the building, such was the power of the blast.

Hundreds of people have been killed in a ferocious air and artillery bombardmen­t of Eastern Ghouta over the past two weeks as the Syrian government seeks to crush the last major rebel stronghold near the capital, Damascus.

It is one of the most intense bombardmen­ts of the war entering its eight year.

President Bashar Al Assad’s Russian allies have called for daily, five-hour humanitari­an ceasefires but these have brought little respite to the besieged area that the UN says is home to 400,000 people.

Mr Alaya makes use of the daily pauses to visit the ruins of the house but says the brief ceasefires leave little time to search.

He remembers his son as a keen footballer who had bought a new TV to watch the World Cup finals in Russia this summer.

On the day of the attack, the family had been sheltering in the basement but Mohammed left to get some tea.

Mr Alaya calls out in vain for his son, even though he is fairly certain where the young man lies buried under the heavy debris.

“I buried all of his friends who died in the bombing,” he says. “I just hope I can find him to bury him next to them, so I can go and visit them all together, the football team.”

 ??  ?? Abu Mohammed Alaya, 50, is helped out of the basement in which he takes shelter during air raids
Abu Mohammed Alaya, 50, is helped out of the basement in which he takes shelter during air raids

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