The Palm Beach Post

Syria allows some patients to evacuate besieged area

- By Sarah El Deeb

BEIRUT — Syria’s government is allowing the evacuation of nearly 30 critically ill people from a besieged Damascus suburb, where hundreds requiring medical treatment have been prevented from reaching hospitals minutes away.

The government recently tightened its siege of eastern Ghouta, home to some 400,000 people, leading to severe shortages of food, fuel and medicine as winter sets in.

Ingy Sedky, spokeswoma­n for the Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross in Damascus, said four patients were allowed to leave Tuesd ay a n d 2 5 o t h e r s were expected to be let out soon.

It was not clear if all would be evacuated in one batch or over several days. The ICRC is partnering with the local Syrian Arab Red Crescent to handle the evacuation­s. SARC spokeswoma­n Mona Kurdi said the evacuees arrived in hospit als in government-controlled Damascus, just a few minutes’ drive away.

The Army of Islam, a prominent rebel group in eastern Ghouta, said the critically ill will be evacuated as part of a deal that was conditiona­l on it releasing an equivalent number of captives.

“There are many more people who need to be evacuated. We hope this will be only the beginning,” Sedky said.

The evacuees included three children, as young as 1 year old, and one adult. The patients, who traveled with family members, needed immediate treatment for cancer, kidney failure and hemophilia.

At l e a s t f ive det a i nees were evacuated from eastern Ghouta late Tuesday.

Some patients may not be able to leave eastern Ghouta for government-controlled areas, because they either fear conscripti­on into the army or detention for having lived or worked in opposition areas.

For weeks, the U.N. has been calling on the government to allow some 500 critically ill people to leave the suburb for treatment and to expand aid groups’ heavily restricted access to the area. Activists in eastern Ghouta have circulated photos online of severely malnourish­ed children. The U.N. says 1 in 8 children in eastern Ghouta is going hungry, up from 1 in 50 in May.

Earlier this month, the U.N. said 12 people had died waiting for medical evacuation from eastern Ghouta. Their names were on a U.Ndrawn list submitted to the government six months ago.

Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said his government is working with Russia, a close ally of Syrian President Bashar Assad, to try to evacuate some 500 people from eastern Ghouta, including about 170 women and children, who are in urgent need of humanitari­an or medical assistance. Turkey is a leading supporter of the Syrian opposition.

Rights groups say the government has used siege tactics across Syria to starve l o c a l p o p u l a t i o n s a n d force rebels to surrender, whic h would a mount to a war crime. The government denies the allegation­s, blaming shortages on rebel groups.

Eastern Ghouta was one of the first areas to rise up against Assad when Arab Spring protests spread across the country in 2011. Government forces surrounded the area in 2013, but tunnels and smuggling allowed residents to bring in food and medical supplies.

The government tightened the noose earlier this year following victories against insurgents in other parts of the country.

Assad’s rule is more secure than at any time since the upri s i ng be g a n, a nd t he opposition is largely confined to the suburbs around Damascus and the northweste­rn rebel-held Idlib province.

“De- e sc alation” agree - ments b ro ke re d by Rus - sia, Iran and Turkey have reduced the violence in most areas, but efforts to reach a political solution to the conflict remain stalled.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said Wednesday that Russian-brokered talks slated for next month were crucial for reaching a settlement, and would not interfere with U.N.-backed negotiatio­ns, which have made virtually no progress since they began in 2014.

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 ?? SANA VIA AP ?? Syrian Arab Red Crescent members help a woman holding a baby get into an ambulance during an evacuation of nearly 30 critically ill people this week from eastern Ghouta, near Damascus, Syria. The evacuees were being taken to hospitals.
SANA VIA AP Syrian Arab Red Crescent members help a woman holding a baby get into an ambulance during an evacuation of nearly 30 critically ill people this week from eastern Ghouta, near Damascus, Syria. The evacuees were being taken to hospitals.

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