Gulf Today

Idlib raid could ignite ‘gigantic powder keg:’ UN

‘Over recent days we have seen provocatio­ns and counter-provocatio­ns, exchanges of mortars and grenades... We have seen increasing incursions in both directions’

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Geneva: the united nations voiced alarm on Thursday over renewed Russian air raids on Idlib, Syria’s last rebel and extremist stronghold, warning the strikes risk setting of “a gigantic power keg.” “We are very worried for recent developmen­ts,” Jan Egeland, the head of the UN Humanitari­an Taskforce for Syria, told reporters.

A 10-week-old Idlib truce deal hangs in the balance after an alleged chemical attack in the government-held city of Aleppo on Saturday, which triggered retaliator­y raids.

The exact circumstan­ces of the attack on three districts of Aleppo remain murky and bitterly disputed.

President Bashar Al-assad’s government has blamed ighters in neighbouri­ng Idlib for the attack, which the Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights said hospitalis­ed 94 people.

In his inal press conference before stepping down on f rid ay,eg eland stressed that if a chemical attack is conirmed, “it is a war crime.” At the same time, he described the escalation around Idlib, and the irst air raids on the area since mid-september, as “very serious”.

“Over recent days we have seen provocatio­ns and counter-provocatio­ns, exchanges of mortars and grenades... We have seen increasing incursions in both directions,” he said, warning that “this is the worst possible kind of action in the worst possible place.” “It is really playing with a gigantic powder keg in the middle of three million civilians.” Egeland meanwhile said he was “heartened” that both Turkey and Russia had insisted during Thursday’s taskforce meeting that they remained committed to maintainin­g the U-shaped buffer zone they helped create around Idlib. During that meeting, representa­tives of both countries had said “we still believe in this, we are still going to push it,” Egeland told reporters.

He applauded both for their efforts but said they could do more to ward off catastroph­e in Idlib.

He urged Turkey to “curb the bad tendencies among armed opposition groups”, and said “certainly Russia can cease air raids immediatel­y, and that is what they need to do.” His comments came as negotiator­s from Iran, Russia and Turkey concluded a meeting in Kazakhstan’s capital Astana in a bid to preserve the id lib t ru ce.eg eland acknowledg­ed that it was dificult to leave a post he has held for more than three years, because Syria’s grinding civil war, which has killed more than 360,000 people and displaced millions, “is not over”.

 ??  ?? Jan Egeland
Jan Egeland

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