The Day

Syria lets 4 critically ill patients leave

Hundreds remain in besieged suburb of Damascus

- By ZAKARIA ZAKARIA

Istanbul — The Red Cross said Wednesday that it has begun an evacuation of critically ill civilians from a besieged suburb of the Syrian capital as part of a rare deal struck between the government and a rebel group.

Ambulances conveyed three sick children and a woman out of Eastern Ghouta late Tuesday for medical treatment in Damascus hospitals. Some 400,000 other people remain trapped in the district, a pocket of opposition-held territory where a long-running government blockade has caused scores of civilians to die of starvation or a lack of medical care.

Under the terms of a deal between Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s government and the hard-line Jaish al-Islam rebel group, which controls Eastern Ghouta, 25 more people are expected to be evacuated for lifesaving medical treatment in the coming days.

The Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross described the evacuation Wednesday as a “positive step” that it hoped would be followed by more.

But the medical mission also underscore­d the extent to which hundreds of thousands of civilians in Syria’s remaining rebel-held enclaves now rely on the dealmaking of belligeren­ts still slugging it out in the dying stages of a war that has claimed almost a half-million lives.

The evacuation is part of a wider agreement that also involved the exchange of 29 government soldiers held by Jaish al-Islam.

Mohamed Kattoub, a spokesman for the Syrian American Medical Society, said the 29 patients slated for evacuation were drawn from a list of more than 600 sick civilians submitted to the United Nations in October. How they had been selected remained unclear, he said.

In the intervenin­g weeks, scores of patients have been treated in underequip­ped hospitals for severe malnutriti­on, now reaching a crisis point after years under siege. Medical facilities in the area have repeatedly been bombed by government warplanes, according to local doctors.

“In the two months since we submitted the list, we have added the names of many more patients with life-threatenin­g conditions like meningitis, or with wounds that cannot be treated in the hospitals we have left,” said Hamza Hasan, a doctor in Eastern Ghouta.

Rights groups say the government has used siege tactics across Syria to starve local population­s and force rebels to surrender, which would amount to a war crime. The government denies the allegation­s, blaming the shortages on rebel groups controllin­g each area.

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