The Palm Beach Post

Mass evacuation postponed after bombing kills 80 kids

- By Bassem Mroue Associated Press

BEIRUT — The evacuation of more than 3,000 Syrians that was scheduled to take place Sunday from four areas as part of a population transfer has been postponed, opposition activists said, a day after a deadly blast that killed more than 120 people, many of them government supporters.

The reasons for the delay were not immediatel­y clear. It came as shells fired by the Islamic State group on government-held parts of the eastern city of Deir el-Zour wounded two members of a Russian media delegation vi siting the area, according to state-run Syrian news agency SANA.

Russia is a main backer of Syrian President Bashar Assad, and Russian journalist­s enjoy wide access in government-held parts of the country.

Russia’s Anna-News military news service, which employs the journalist­s, said one was wounded in the arm while the other suffered leg and stomach wounds. The news service said the two were evacuated adding that their condition was “satisfacto­ry.”

The United Nations is not overseeing the transfer deal, which involves residents of the pro-government villages of Foua and Kfarya and the opposition-held towns of Madaya and Zabadani. All four have been under siege for years, their fate linked through a series of reciprocal agreements that the U.N. says have hindered aid deliveries.

Rami Abdurrahma­n, who heads the Britain-based Syrian Observator­y for Human R i g h t s , a n d He z b o l l a h’s Al-Manar TV, earlier said that 3,000 people will be evacuated from Foua and Kfarya, while 200, the vast majority of them fighters, will be evacuated from Zabadani and Madaya.

Abdurrahma­n and opposition activist Hussam Mahmoud, who is from Madaya, said the evacuation has been delayed. Abdurrahma­n said no permission was given for the evacuation to go ahead while Mahmoud said it has been delayed for “logistical reasons.”

It was not immediatel­y clear if the evacuees feared attacks similar to Saturday’s bombing.

Abdurrahma­n said Saturday ’s blast —which hit an area where thousands of pro- government evacuees had been waiting for hours — killed 126. He said the dead included 109 people from Foua and Kfarya, among them 80 children and 13 women.

No one has claimed the attack, but both the Islamic State group and the al-Qaida-affiliated Fatah al-Sham Front have targeted civil- ians in government areas in the past.

A wounded girl, who said she lost her four siblings in the blast, told Al-Manar TV from her hospital bed that children who had been deprived of food for years i n t he t wo v i l l a ge s were approached by a man in the car who told them to come and eat potato chips. She said once many had gathered, there was an explosion that tore some of the children to pieces.

Anthony Lake, UNICEF’s executive director, said in a statement Sunday that after six years of war and carnage in Syria “there comes a new horror that must break the heart of anyone who has one.”

“We must draw from this not only anger, but renewed d e t e r mi n a t i o n t o r e a c h all the innocent children throughout Syria with help and comfort,” he said.

After the blast, some 60 buses carrying 2,200 people, including 400 opposition fighters, entered areas held by rebels in the northern province of Aleppo, Abdurrahma­n said. More than 50 buses and 20 ambulances carrying some 5,000 Foua and Kfarya residents entered the government-held city of Aleppo, Syrian state TV said, with some of them later reaching a shelter in the village of Jibreen to the south.

U.N. relief coordinato­r Stephen O’Brien said he was “horrified” by the deadly bombing, and that while the U.N. was not involved in the transfer it was ready to “scale up our support to evacuees.”

Residents of Madaya and Zabadani, formerly summer resorts, joined the 2011 uprising against Assad. Both came under government siege in the ensuing civil war.

Residents of Foua and Kf a r y a , b e s i e ge d by t he rebels, have lived under a steady hail of rockets and mortars for years, but were supplied with food and medicine through military airdrops.

 ?? AP ?? This frame grab from video provided by the Thiqa News Agency shows rebel gunmen at the site of a blast Saturday that damaged several buses and vans at the Rashideen area, a rebelcontr­olled district outside Aleppo city, Syria.
AP This frame grab from video provided by the Thiqa News Agency shows rebel gunmen at the site of a blast Saturday that damaged several buses and vans at the Rashideen area, a rebelcontr­olled district outside Aleppo city, Syria.

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