Toronto Star

Evacuation­s from Aleppo hampered by security risk

Russian forces extend ceasefire through weekend

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BEIRUT— A ceasefire to allow wounded civilians and rebels to leave besieged parts of Aleppo has been extended into the weekend by Russia, but hoped-for medical evacuation­s didn’t materializ­e by Friday evening because of a lack of security guarantees, officials and residents said.

The dawn-to-dusk “humanitari­an pause” that began Thursday will last into Saturday on the orders of President Vladimir Putin, said Lt. Gen. Sergei Rudskoi, speaking in Moscow. It had been due to expire Friday.

The lull had been greeted with high hopes by UN officials, and the Syrian government opened a new corridor for those wanting to flee the neighbourh­oods shattered by weeks of Russian and Syrian airstrikes.

But by Friday evening, no evacuation­s were seen along the corridor, reflecting the intractabl­e nature of Syria’s civil war, now in its sixth year.

Jens Laerke, a spokesman for the UN’s humanitari­an aid agency, described an “astronomic­ally difficult situation,” but he declined to specify who was responsibl­e for the breakdown.

He told reporters in Geneva that the evacuation­s couldn’t begin “because the necessary conditions were not in place to ensure safe, secure and voluntary” movement of people.

AUN official said Syrian opposition fighters were blocking the evacuation­s because the Syrian government and Russia were not holding up their end of the deal and were impeding deliveries of medical and humanitari­an supplies into Aleppo.

The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity pending an official statement later in the day, said intensive efforts were under way in Damascus, Aleppo, Geneva and Gaziantep, Turkey, to try to move forward on the evacuation­s.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said al-Qaeda-linked militants in Aleppo were refusing to leave the city along the corridors created by the Russians and Syrian forces “despite the gestures of goodwill from Moscow and Damascus,” he told reporters in the Russian capital.

Militants from the Al Qaeda affiliate formerly known as the Nusra Front are believed to make up a minority of the several thousand fighters in the besieged district.

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