Baltimore Sun Sunday

Syrians said to be leaving Aleppo’s rebel-held areas

- By Bassem Mroue

BEIRUT — Dozens of families and some opposition fighters started leaving besieged rebel-held neighborho­ods in the northern Syrian city of Aleppo on Saturday after the government opened up safe corridors for civilians and fighters who want to leave, state media reported.

The government closed the main road into rebel-held areas of Aleppo on July 17, effectivel­y isolating the 300,000 people living there. Last week, Syrian President Bashar Assad offered an amnesty to rebels who lay down their arms and surrender to authoritie­s in the next three months.

Opposition activists denied reports that Aleppo residents were leaving rebel-held neighborho­ods of the city, saying that state media was attempting to falsely suggest that civilians were fleeing the area in large numbers.

Syrian TV footage appeared to show dozens of people leaving, a small proportion of the hundreds of thousands of people still living in besieged eastern neighborho­ods of Aleppo.

About a dozen men were shown on state TV surrenderi­ng to government forces. State TV also showed dozens of women and children arriving in a street lined with heavily damaged buildings in the government-held part of Aleppo’s Salaheddin­e neighborho­od. State news agency SANA said the civilians later boarded buses and were taken to shelters set up by the government on the western side of Aleppo.

SANA said some fighters came forward to government forces stationed in Salaheddin­e. Surrenderi­ng fighters usually are questioned by government authoritie­s before signing a pledge promising not to take up arms against the Syrian state again.

“We are feeling good now because we are under the protection of the army,” a Syrian woman told state TV after leaving rebel-held parts of Aleppo, Syria’s largest city.

State media said that large numbers of people were being prevented by militants from leaving rebel-held parts of the city.

The Russian military said 169 civilians have left Aleppo through the three safe corridors since they were set up last week, including 85 Friday and 52 Saturday. In addition, 69 fighters have left after laying down their arms, said Lt. Gen. Sergei Chvarkov, who heads the Russian center for reconcilia­tion located at a Latakia military base, in a statement.

He said four more corridors were in the process of being created.

The Syrian government has set up six shelters that can accommodat­e at least 3,000 people, he said.

Syrian opposition activists expressed deep skepticism over the government’s humanitari­an corridors.

Aleppo-based opposition activist Baraa al-Halaby denied reports that civilians and fighters have left to government-held parts of the city.

“This is a game by the regime. Not a single person left,” al-Halaby said. “The regime wants to say that civilians have left in order to burn Aleppo.”

The Local Coordinati­on Committees, a Syrian opposition monitoring group, denied that civilians and fighters were heading to government areas of the city. The Britain-based Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights confirmed that people have left opposition areas but had no numbers.

The evacuation came a day after U.N. envoy for Syria Staffan de Mistura urged Russia to leave the creation of humanitari­an corridors around Aleppo to the United Nations and its partners. His comments were seen as a gentle snub to Moscow, which had made the proposal a day earlier as pro-government troops tightened their encircleme­nt of rebel-held parts of the northern Syrian city.

In comments carried later Friday by Russia’s Interfax news agency, Deputy Defense Minister Anatoly Antonov said Russia was willing to work with the U.N. on setting up the corridors. He said Russia is “ready for close and constructi­ve cooperatio­n with all internatio­nal humanitari­an organizati­ons and, of course, with the office of the U.N. special envoy on Syria.”

 ?? KARAM AL-MASRI/GETTY-AFP ?? The rebel-held part of Aleppo’s Salaheddin­e neighborho­od in Syria appears desolate Saturday afternoon.
KARAM AL-MASRI/GETTY-AFP The rebel-held part of Aleppo’s Salaheddin­e neighborho­od in Syria appears desolate Saturday afternoon.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States