Lodi News-Sentinel

Demoralize­d Syrian civilians evacuate Aleppo

- By Philip Issa and Sarah El Deeb

BEIRUT — Weeping, hobbling on crutches or dragging suitcases, hundreds of survivors of a devastatin­g government bombardmen­t and siege left the last sliver of opposition-held Aleppo on Thursday, an evacuation that sealed the end of the rebellion’s most important stronghold and was a watershed moment in Syria’s 5-year-old civil war.

For the opposition, it was a humiliatin­g defeat. A smiling President Bashar Assad called it a historic event comparable to the birth of Christ and the revelation of the Quran.

A U.N. official described it as “a black chapter in the history of internatio­nal relations.”

Traumatize­d residents filtered out to green government buses on a chilly day through Aleppo’s streets lined with flattened buildings. Years of resistance were stamped out in a relentless campaign over the past month that saw hospitals bombed, bodies left unburied and civilians blown apart by shells as they fled for safety.

“We struggled for six years. We were supposed to be the ones to get them out, not them us,” said one tearful woman who held a baby, speaking in a video posted online by an opposition activist.

She explained that it wasn’t the bombardmen­t that forced them out.

“We left because we feared for our honor from the regime,” the unidentifi­ed woman said.

Under a surrender deal brokered by Russia and Turkey, tens of thousands of residents and rebel fighters are being evacuated to opposition-controlled areas in the surroundin­g countrysid­e, a process likely to take several days.

They said it was too dangerous to go to government-held areas, where they faced potential retributio­n from security services alleged to carry out arrests and torture of opposition sympathize­rs. Many are of fighting age and don’t want to be drafted into the military.

“We slept in the streets. It’s shameful,” a unidentifi­ed man said in an opposition video. “Where is the world?”

Leaning on crutches and sobbing uncontroll­ably, he described fleeing the bombardmen­t.

“You don’t know if it’s an airplane or shelling or rockets. You never know,” he added.

Eastern Aleppo rose in revolt against Assad in 2012 and battled since then with the western, government-held part of the city in one of the most horrific and destructiv­e fronts of the civil war.

The rebels’ hold in Syria’s onetime commercial powerhouse was a major point of pride, and at times it seemed an invulnerab­le part of what was once a growing opposition-held patch of territory in the north.

But government forces finally surrounded eastern Aleppo and then battered it to pieces. The air and ground campaign by Syrian troops — backed by Russian warplanes and forces from Assad’s regional allies — relentless­ly wore away at the enclave.

Hundreds of civilians were killed, and tens of thousands fled to government-held areas. The pocket was reduced to a few blocks packed with the bloodied, exhausted and demoralize­d but also die-hard opposition forces.

For Assad, the victory puts most major cities under his control and raises hopes for the beginning of the end of the revolt.

“History is being made,” an upbeat Assad proclaimed in a video on social media.

“What is happening is bigger than congratula­tions,” he said, calling it comparable to Christ’s birth and the revelation of Islam’s holy Quran to Muhammad.

Twenty buses with Assad’s picture displayed in the windshield­s and 26 ambulances carried the civilians, including more than 50 sick or wounded, from the devastated Ameriyeh neighborho­od. They drove through government-held districts to Rashideen, a rebel-held area outside Aleppo, the Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross and Syrian state media said.

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