The Palm Beach Post

Aid delivered to Ghouta amid renewed violence

- By Zeina Karam and Bassem Mroue

BEIRUT — An aid convoy crossed into the embattled rebel-held suburbs of Damascus on Friday, delivering desperatel­y needed aid despite heavy fighting that broke out “extremely close” to the convoy and renewed airstrikes by the Syrian government.

The Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross said the close-range fighting came despite security guarantees from the parties involved in the conflict that humanitari­an aid could enter the town of Douma, in eastern Ghouta.

“We were taken aback by the fighting that broke out despite guarantees from the parties involved in this conflict that humanitari­ans could enter Douma, in Eastern Ghouta,” said ICRC regional director Robert Mardini.

“As more aid is needed in the coming days, it is absolutely critical that these assurances be renewed and respected in the future,” Mardini said. “Aid workers should not have to risk their lives to deliver assistance. The security of humanitari­an workers, as well as that of civilians, must be guaranteed at all times.”

ICRC said it delivered along with the U.N. and the Syrian Arab Red Crescent 2,400 food parcels that can sustain 12,000 people for one month, as well as 3,248 wheat flour bags.

The delivery consists of supplies that were not offloaded during a mission to the enclave on Monday, which was cut short because of deteriorat­ing security. The trucks had been stuck at the Wafideen crossing over the entire week, waiting to enter and deliver the remaining food parcels and flour bags.

The ICRC said the aid was delivered in Douma — the largest and most populated town in the rebel-held eastern Ghouta, on the edge of the Syrian capital — earlier in the day. The convoy entered during a brief lull but the bombardmen­t and fighting resumed after the convoy entered eastern Ghouta.

Rami Abdurrahma­n, who heads the Britain-based Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights, said Douma was shelled before the convoy went in. Once the relief workers arrived, Syrian government forces shelled the outskirts of the town, he said.

Mohammed Alloush, the political chief of the Army of Islam rebel group, told The Associated Press that as the convoy was inside Douma they were “being targeted by the regime although they have informed the Russians about their location.” Alloush’s group is the largest in eastern Ghouta and controls Douma.

ICRC spokeswoma­n Ingy Sedky said aid workers went into eastern Ghouta “after getting security guarantees from all parties to make sure no incident will happen during the presence of our team” there.

The attempt followed what opposition activists and the Observator­y said was one of the quietest nights in eastern Ghouta since Syrian government forces escalated their assault on the rebellious region on Feb. 18.

The government and its Russian backers, determined to wrest eastern Ghouta from rebel control after seven years of war, recently intensifie­d the shelling and bombardmen­t to clear the way for its troops to advance on the ground. Around 900 people have been killed in the past three weeks of relentless bombardmen­t.

Doctors Without Borders said Friday that between Feb. 18 and March 3 at least 1,005 people were killed and 4,829 wounded — or 71 killed and 344 wounded on average per day.

 ?? ARMY OF ISLAM ?? Flames rise from a Syrian government airstrike attack Friday in eastern Ghouta, a suburb of Damascus, Syria, in a frame grab from video provided by Syrian rebels’ Army of Islam media outlet.
ARMY OF ISLAM Flames rise from a Syrian government airstrike attack Friday in eastern Ghouta, a suburb of Damascus, Syria, in a frame grab from video provided by Syrian rebels’ Army of Islam media outlet.

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