Putin orders daily pause in fighting in Syria enclave
The cease-fire in east Ghouta would enable civilians to leave and aid to be delivered.
AMMAN, Jordan — Russian President Vladimir Putin on Monday ordered a daily cease-fire in east Ghouta, the Syrian rebel-held enclave near the capital, Damascus, and the target of a ferocious government assault that has turned life in the region, according to the United Nations, into “hell on earth.”
“As ordered by the Russian president, a daily humanitarian pause from [9 a.m. to 2 p.m.] is being introduced starting Feb. 27 to avoid civilian casualties in east Ghouta,” the Russian Defense Ministry said in a statement Monday, according to a translation by the English-language news broadcaster Russia Today.
Russia is the top international supporter of Syrian President Bashar Assad. Its warplanes and special forces troops, which first deployed in the country in 2015, are credited with turning the tide of the war in Assad’s favor.
The pause in the fighting, the statement continued, would allow civilians to leave the area through special humanitarian corridors, whose coordinates have been prepared and will soon be announced. It would also facilitate the delivery of humanitarian assistance in the enclave, which has suffered severe shortages of food and medications under a yearslong siege by government forces.
The U.N. estimates about 393,000 people live in east Ghouta, a grouping of 23 Damascus suburbs under the control of opposition factions, including both Al Qaeda-affiliated Islamists and mainstream rebel groups supported by the West.
Moscow proposed a similar arrangement near Tanf, a desert region near Syria’s southern tip where tens of thousands have fled violence and gathered near the border of Jordan. U.S.led coalition forces are also stationed in the area.
Putin’s announcement comes two days after the U.N. Security Council, despite last-minute wrangling by Russia and Iran (another staunch Assad backer), unanimously approved a resolution demanding a 30day truce in Syria. In the latest round of violence in east Ghouta, a Russian-backed offensive has killed about 560 people since last week, activists said, when the offensive first began.
On Sunday, fighting continued unabated as pro-government troops began a ground assault on five fronts to breach rebel lines. And on Monday, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a pro-opposition monitoring group based in Britain with a network of activists in Syria, said 22 people were killed.
Pro-opposition activists also accused government forces of deploying chlorine gas in Shayfoniyeh, a town roughly eight miles northeast of central Damascus, after an airstrike in which victims exhibited symptoms including eye irritation and breathing difficulties.
Damascus has long denied using any chemical weapons, though it stands accused of using sarin gas on the Ghouta region in 2013. That assault brought the U.S. to the brink of attacking Damascus, a threat averted by an eleventh-hour deal struck with Russia in which Assad agreed to give up his chemical arsenal.
“Security Council resolutions are only meaningful if implemented .... As I had the opportunity to say in the Security Council itself a few days ago, in particular eastern Ghouta cannot wait,” said U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres in Geneva on Monday. He added that the U.N. was ready to deliver assistance.
“It is high time to stop this hell on earth,” he said.