Texarkana Gazette

On the move

Syria’s divisions crystalliz­e with latest evacuation­s

- By Philip Issa

BEIRUT—Thousands of Syrians were bused out of their towns on Friday in the first stage of a widely criticized population transfer that reflects the relentless segregatio­n of Syrian society along political and sectarian lines.

The coordinate­d evacuation­s delivered war-weary fighters and residents from two years of siege and hunger, but moved the country closer to a division of its national population by loyalty and sect.

As diplomacy in Moscow focused on the U.S. airstrikes targeting Syria, more than 2,350 people were bused out of the twin rebel-held towns of Madaya and Zabadani near Damascus, and another 5,000 from the pro-government towns of Foua and Kfraya in the country’s north.

“There was no heating, no food, nothing to sustain our lives. We left so that God willing (the siege) may ease on those who remain,” said Ahmad Afandar, a 19-year-old evacuee from Madaya whose parents stayed behind.

Madaya and Zabadani, once summer resorts to Damascus, have been shattered under the cruelty of government siege. The two towns rebelled against Damascus’ authority in 2011 when demonstrat­ions swept through the country demanding the end of President Bashar Assad’s rule.

Residents were reduced to hunting rodents and eating the leaves off trees. Photos of children gaunt with hunger shocked the world and gave new urgency to U.N. relief operations in Syria.

Foua and Kfraya, besieged by the rebels, lived under a steady hail of rockets and mortars. They were supplied with food and medical supplies through military airdrops.

In a video posted on Facebook from one of the buses departing Madaya, a man identified as Hossam said: “We were forced to leave. We left our land, our parents, our memories, our childhood—everything.”

Critics say the string of evacuation­s, which could see some 30,000 people moved across battle lines over the next 60 days, amounts to forced displaceme­nt along political and sectarian lines. The United Nations is not supervisin­g the evacuation­s.

The predominan­tly Shiite towns of Foua and Kfraya have remained loyal to the Syrian government while surroundin­g Idlib province has come under hardline Sunni rebel rule. Their population­s will now find security under the government’s outwardly secular authority.

Madaya and Zabadani, on the other hand, are believed to now be wholly inhabited by Sunnis, the consequenc­e of six years of deft political maneuverin­g by Assad to steer what started as a broad movement against his authority into a choice between him and Sunni Islamist rule.

Playing on fears of al-Qaida rule, Assad’s government showed leniency to the country’s Christian, Shiite and Alawite minorities while bringing the weight of its military against majority Sunni areas—especially Sunni pockets in demographi­cally mixed areas, such as along the Lebanese border, where Madaya and Zabadani lie, and along the Mediterran­ean coast.

“They of course wanted to beat the Sunni rebels into submission,” said Joshua Landis, director of the Center for Middle East Studies at the University of Oklahoma. “This has had the effect of driving them out.”

Since 2011, 5 million Syrians have been made refugees and another 7 million have been displaced within the country’s borders.

“The amount of population rearrangem­ent has been tremendous in Syria,” said Landis. The latest evacuation­s are “a drop in the bucket.”

Madaya and Zabadani are the latest in a constellat­ion of towns once held by the opposition around Damascus to submit to government rule. The Britain-based Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights monitoring group said government forces entered Madaya after the evacuation Friday. Rebel gunmen were expected to leave Zabadani on Saturday.

Of the estimated 40,000 inhabitant­s of Madaya, some 2,000 elected to take the buses to rebel-held Idlib province rather than be subjected to the notorious government security services. They include former fighters, activists and medical workers, who have been targeted by the government with detention, torture and bombardmen­t throughout the conflict.

There was no heating, no food, nothing to sustain our lives. We left so that God willing (the siege) may ease on those who remain, —Ahmad Afandar, 19-year-old evacuee

 ?? Syrian Central Military Media via AP ?? This frame grab from video provided by the government-controlled Syrian Central Military Media shows Syrian citizens gather around buses Friday as they leave from Madaya, an opposition-held town near Damascus. The Syrian government and rebels began a...
Syrian Central Military Media via AP This frame grab from video provided by the government-controlled Syrian Central Military Media shows Syrian citizens gather around buses Friday as they leave from Madaya, an opposition-held town near Damascus. The Syrian government and rebels began a...

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