Arab Times

Russia announces humanitari­an operation for ‘besieged’ Aleppo

France, UK call for end to disastrous siege

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ALEPPO, Syria, July 28, (Agencies): Syria regime ally Russia on Thursday announced a “large-scale” aid operation to allow civilians and fighters to flee besieged Aleppo, as the president offered an amnesty to rebels who surrender.

Government forces have surrounded rebel-held districts in eastern Aleppo since July 17, sparking fears for at least 200,000 people who live there.

Residents have reported food shortages and spiralling prices in rebel districts since regime forces cut off the opposition’s main supply route into the northern city earlier this month.

Russian Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu said three humanitari­an corridors were being opened “to aid civilians held hostage by terrorists and for fighters wishing to lay down their arms”.

He told Russian news agencies that a fourth corridor would be opened to the north of Aleppo for rebels to flee with their weapons.

Medical and food assistance would be provided along the routes for civilians and fighters who lay down their weapons, Shoigu said, adding the operation would get underway later Thursday.

President Bashar al-Assad, meanwhile, issued a decree offering an amnesty to rebels who surrender over the next three months, the official SANA news agency reported.

“Everyone carrying arms ... and sought by justice ... is excluded from full punishment if they hand themselves in and lay down their weapons,” SANA reported.

Syria’s state broadcaste­r also announced “the opening of three passages to allow citizens out of eastern districts” of Aleppo.

But an AFP correspond­ent who went to see one of the corridors said it remained closed and saw no movement of residents nearby.

Regime planes on Thursday dropped flyers showing a map with the location of these humanitari­an passages, he said, as well as small aid packages.

As Russia made the announceme­nt, France and Britain renewed demands for an end to the regime’s “disastrous” siege of eastern Aleppo.

French Foreign Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault and his British counterpar­t Boris Johnson, in a joint statement, said the consequenc­es of the siege, “including the bombardmen­t of civilians and medical facilities, are already disastrous and could generate further refugees”.

Previously the country’s economic hub, Aleppo and its surroundin­g countrysid­e have suffered some of the worst fighting in the five-year conflict that has killed more than 280,000 people.

It has been roughly divided into a regime-controlled west and a rebel-held east since July 2012.

Analysts say that losing Aleppo would be a major blow for the armed opposition and could signal a turning point in the conflict, which began in 2011 with the brutal crackdown of anti-government protests.

Also on Thursday, Syrian government forces drove rebels from the neighbourh­ood of Bani Zeid, on Aleppo’s northern outskirts, after heavy overnight fighting, a monitor said.

The Britain-based Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights said the capture of Bani Zeid further tightens the regime siege of rebel-held districts.

UN envoy Staffan de Mistura said the world body had not been consulted on Russia’s initiative, warning that the humanitari­an situation was “very serious” in eastern Aleppo which had only two to three weeks worth of supplies.

On the political front, the envoy has said he hopes that peace talks aimed at finding a solution to end the Syria war could resume at the end of August.

Meanwhile, Human Rights Watch on Thursday accused Assad’s regime and Russia of extensivel­y using banned cluster munitions against the rebels since late May.

The New York-based watchdog said it had documented 47 cluster munition attacks that killed and injured dozens of civilians in rebel-held areas in three provinces since May 27, many north and west of Aleppo.

Widely banned, cluster munitions contain dozens or hundreds of bomblets and are fired in rockets or dropped from the air.

They spread explosives over large areas and are indiscrimi­nate in nature, often continuing to maim and kill long after the initial attack when previously unexploded bomblets detonate.

The United States military has found enough credible informatio­n to begin a formal investigat­ion into allegation­s that US-led coalition air strikes killed civilians on July 19 in Syria, a spokesman for the coalition fighting Islamic State, Colonel Chris Garver, said on Wednesday.

Garver said a credibilit­y assessment had been completed and the formal investigat­ion had been initiated.

UN Syria envoy Staffan de Mistura called on Russia and the United States on Thursday to work together in reducing the fighting in Syria, saying that failure of their cooperatio­n plan would have a very negative impact on planned peace talks.

US and Russian military officials were coming to Geneva to discuss details, he told reporters after a weekly meeting of the humanitari­an task force.

“We are all awaiting and urging the two co-chairs — which means Russia and the US- to expedite their own discussion­s on how to reduce violence,” de Mistura said.

“I understand that there are several experts from the military establishm­ent from both Russia and perhaps from the US on their way to Geneva and probably, most likely, in order to discuss the socalled ‘devil in the details’ which are the ones we have been asking to be sorted out as soon as possible.”

 ??  ?? Syrian army soldiers patrol the area around the entrance of Bani Zeid after taking control of the previously rebel-held district of Leramun, on the northwest outskirts of Aleppo on July 28. Pro-Assad forces took control of Bani Zeid after heavy...
Syrian army soldiers patrol the area around the entrance of Bani Zeid after taking control of the previously rebel-held district of Leramun, on the northwest outskirts of Aleppo on July 28. Pro-Assad forces took control of Bani Zeid after heavy...

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