Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Israel evacuates rescue workers from Syrian war zone

- The Washington Post

BEIRUT – An internatio­nal operation to rescue more than a hundred Syrian rescue workers and their families took place early Sunday, carrying hundreds of civilians through Israel and Jordan under cover of darkness as President Bashar al-assad’s forces prepared to take control of the area.

The Israel Defense Forces said in a statement that the operation had been carried out due to an “immediate threat” to the rescue workers’ lives, and that it had been coordinate­d with the United States and several European nations. Jordan said later 422 Syrian citizens had crossed its border, and that they would now be resettled as refugees in several Western countries.

The White Helmets rescue workers – most of them women – had been among tens of thousands of civilians packed into a final pocket of opposition-held territory along Syria’s border with Israel as rebel forces there struck a surrender deal with the government.

Under the terms of the agreement, militants who do not wish to reconcile with the state are being bused to northern Syria where they will join more than 2 million people, around half of them displaced from other areas, in the final zone of opposition control.

But fears for the rescue workers, who have often been targeted while racing to sites of government bombing, had been growing for weeks.

The Syrian government views the group a “terrorist” organizati­on because it works in areas controlled by the country’s armed opposition, and White Helmets have been pulled from buses by pro-government forces during previous evacuation­s of opposition-held territory before disappeari­ng into the state’s notorious network of prisons.

“It was an operation to rescue the rescuers,” said one person with knowledge of the mission who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not publicly authorized to discuss its details.

“They were in a terrible state. They’d been on the move for days, having to rely on really scant informatio­n. Even hours before they didn’t know what was going to happen.”

The unpreceden­ted operation came perilously close to failure on multiple occasions through the night, sources with knowledge of the matter said. An initial plan to leave through three separate crossings was scuppered when Islamic State forces took over one of the positions, leaving part of the group trapped and unable to reach the border. Their fate remained uncertain Sunday.

Eventually, the rescue workers and their families – fragile and exhausted – crossed the Israeli border on foot as searchligh­ts lit up the night sky. They were then bused through northern Israel to Jordan, where they were met by representa­tives of the United Nations refugee agency.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States