The Phnom Penh Post

Troops advance in Aleppo as UN warns of ‘giant graveyard’

- Karam al-Masri with Maya Gebeily

HUNDREDS of elite Syrian troops moved into east Aleppo yesterday ahead of a push into the most densely populated areas, after the UN warned the city risked becoming a “giant graveyard”.

Despite fierce global criticism, forces loyal to President Bashar al-Assad have pressed an assault to retake control of all of Aleppo, once Syria’s commercial hub but now a divided city in ruins.

The assault – backed by heavy artiller y fire – has spurred a mass exodus of tens of thousands of residents from rebelheld districts.

The relentless barrage has left Aleppo’s streets strewn with the bodies of men, women and children, many lying next to the suitcases they had packed to escape. The steady artillery fire could again be heard pounding rebel areas early yesterday, with heavy rainfall adding to the misery.

The assault has seen Assad’s forces make significan­t gains in the last week. After overrunnin­g the city’s northeast, they were in control of 40 percent of the territory once held by opposition forces in Aleppo, according to the Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights.

“The regime is tightening the noose on the remaining section of east Aleppo under rebel control,” Observator­y head Rami Abdel Rahman said.

He said hundreds of fighters from the elite Republican Guard and Fourth Division arrived in Aleppo yesterday “in prepara- tion for street battles” in the densely populated southeast.

“They are moving in on the ground, but they are afraid of ambushes because of the density of both residents and fighters,” he said.

The violence in Aleppo has sparked widespread outrage, but little concrete action from the internatio­nal community.

Speaking to a special Security Council session on Wednesday, UN humanitari­an chief Stephen O’Brien made an urgent appeal.

“For the sake of humanity we call on – we plead – with the parties and those with influence to do everything in their power to protect civilians and enable access to the besieged part of eastern Aleppo before it becomes one giant graveyard,” he said.

Syrian warplanes have been pounding east Aleppo with air- strikes for months – often using crude munitions like barrel bombs – but as the ground advance has gathered pace the army has instead turned to more precise artillery. The effect has been no less devastatin­g.

Yesterday, four children from a single family were killed in artillery fire by regime forces on the rebel-held Maadi neighbourh­ood of Aleppo, according to the Observator­y. And at least 26 civilians, including seven children, were killed in shelling of the rebel-held Jubb al-Qubbeh district on Wednesday, t he Observator­y said.

The latest attacks brought the civilian toll of the government’s offensive to more than 300 civilians, including 42 children, since November 15.

Retaliator­y rocket fire by the rebels on government-held are- as has killed 48 civilians, according to the Britain-based Observator­y, which has a wide network of sources on the ground.

Thousands of people have sought refuge in the remaining rebel-held neighbourh­oods in southeaste­rn Aleppo, arriving with overpacked suitcases or sometimes just the clothes on their backs.

Another 50,000 have poured out into territory controlled by government forces or local Kurdish authoritie­s, according to the Observator­y.

More than 300,000 people have been killed since Syria’s conflict erupted in March 2011 with anti-government protests, before spiralling into a civil war.

The loss of east Aleppo – a rebel stronghold since 2012 – would be the biggest blow to Syria’s opposition in more than five years. The city had become a powerful symbol of Syria’s uprising, producing some of the war’s most iconic images – including of Omran, the shell-shocked toddler in an ambulance.

At Wednesday’s special UN session on Aleppo, British ambassador Matthew Rycroft said Assad ally Russia was hamstringi­ng the Security Council.

Moscow launched a military campaign in support of Assad in September of last year and has since carried out airstrikes in Syria. Rycroft accused Moscow, which in October vetoed a resolution to stop the bombing in Aleppo, of supporting “a deliberate act of starvation and a deliberate withholdin­g of medical care”.

Russia’s envoy, Vitaly Churkin, brushed off criticism and said Syria was seeking to eliminate extremists such as the al-Nusra Front, which has rebranded itself the Fateh al-Sham Front after severing ties to al-Qaeda.

“We vehemently condemn any attempts to protect terrorists including any political action on a humanitari­an pretext which, sadly alas, UN humanitari­an works have been dragged into,” Churkin said.

US ambassador Samantha Power urged the Security Council to pass a resolution that would mandate a 10-day military halt to allow humanitari­an supplies to enter Aleppo.

But she feared a new Russian veto and acknowledg­ed that a brief halt “is barely even a BandAid and it is a sign in some ways of just how low our bar has become”.

 ?? SYRIAN CIVIL DEFENCE IN ALEPPO/AFP ?? An image grab taken from a video released by the Syrian Civil Defence in Aleppo, known as the White Helmets, on Wednesday, reportedly shows bodies lying on a street in the rebel-held district of Jubb al-Qubbeh in eastern Aleppo following government...
SYRIAN CIVIL DEFENCE IN ALEPPO/AFP An image grab taken from a video released by the Syrian Civil Defence in Aleppo, known as the White Helmets, on Wednesday, reportedly shows bodies lying on a street in the rebel-held district of Jubb al-Qubbeh in eastern Aleppo following government...

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