The Daily Telegraph

Dozens killed as Assad’s jets target rebels’ besieged base

Regime gears up for all-out assault on last Damascus stronghold and joins Kurds against Turkish incursion

- By Raf Sanchez MIDDLE EAST CORRESPOND­ENT

DOZENS of people were killed by Syrian regime air strikes and artillery bombardmen­t yesterday as Bashar alassad’s forces appeared to be preparing an all-out assault on Eastern Ghouta, a rebel-held suburb of Damascus.

As Assad’s troops and their Russian allies brought carnage to the outskirts of the Syrian capital, other pro-regime fighters were reportedly preparing to join with Kurdish forces to repel a Turkish incursion into the pocket of Afrin in northern Syria.

Turkey warned that it would open fire on regime forces if they sided with the Kurds, raising the prospect of the most direct confrontat­ion between Turkish and Syrian troops since the start of Syria’s war in 2011.

At least 71 people were killed and more than 300 were injured in 24 hours of intense bombing in Eastern Ghouta, according to the Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights (SOHR).

Many of the dead were children and pictures showed rows of small bodies wrapped in bloodied white shrouds.

Five children from one family – Mohammed, Hassan, Hind, Fatima and Sa’adia – were killed along with both of their parents when their neighbourh­ood was bombarded, activists said.

“Since this morning the bombing has not stopped,” Abu Jihad Darawi, a Ghouta resident, told The Daily Telegraph. “I was in the street and 20 rockets hit houses around me. The people are living as if they are dead.”

Around 400,000 civilians are trapped inside Eastern Ghouta, which is the last major opposition-held area around Damascus. The suburb has been under siege by regime forces since 2013 and supplies of food are perilously low.

Pro-regime forces have been massing around Eastern Ghouta since the weekend and the intensifie­d bombardmen­t has led many analysts to believe that Assad’s fighters are preparing for a full-scale attack to recapture the area.

“Ghouta is of major symbolic importance to the regime because it is so close to Damascus and it matters for economic and security reasons,” said Ibrahim al-assil, a fellow at the Middle East Institute.

“If the regime takes it, they can tell their supporters that the war is almost over and the opposition only controls some pockets in the north, east and south but not in what the regime calls ‘useful Syria’ in the west.”

The regime will likely try to repeat in Eastern Ghouta the model it implemente­d during Aleppo and other sieges. After bombarding and attacking the area, it may offer rebel fighters and civilians a deal, where they are allowed to leave for an opposition-held province in the north in return for abandoning their territory.

But that model is likely to be complicate­d by the size of the Eastern Ghouta pocket, where hundreds of thousands of people would need to be evacuated.

Separately, Syrian state media said that pro-regime forces were preparing

‘Twenty rockets hit houses around me. The people are living as if they are dead’

to move towards the Kurdish-held pocket of Afrin in northern Syria, where Kurd fighters are battling a Turkish incursion.

Syrian state media said the regime fighters would side with Kurdish troops from the People’s Protection Units (YPG) and “join the resistance against the Turkish aggression”.

Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu, Turkey’s foreign minister, warned the regime not to take the side of the Kurds in Afrin.

“If the regime is entering Afrin to oust the YPG, there is no problem. But if they are entering to protect the YPG, then no one can stop us,” he said.

Turkey and the Syrian regime have exchanged threats and angry words for years but have not deliberate­ly confronted each other on the battlefiel­d.

Mr al-assil said it was likely that a deal would be negotiated before there was outright combat.

“Everyone is interested in reaching a deal: the regime, the Kurds, the Turks, the Russians,” he said.

 ??  ?? Pulled from the rubble: A man carries an infant rescued from the ruins of a shelled home, while a wounded child, left, is treated by medics
Pulled from the rubble: A man carries an infant rescued from the ruins of a shelled home, while a wounded child, left, is treated by medics
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