Arab Times

Syrians describe terrifying choices

Civilians fear bombs in rebel enclave

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BEIRUT, Dec 5, (RTRS): As Syrian government forces advanced into Aleppo’s rebel-held al-Sakhour district, Hasan al-Ali said he faced the choice of staying put and being caught by the army, or fleeing into a shrinking rebel enclave under relentless bombardmen­t.

A father of three children, he opted for the latter, though food, fuel, water and medicine are running critically low in rebel-held areas, such is his fear of the Syrian government that insurgents have been trying to unseat for more than five years.

“I didn’t take anything with me. I took the kids, ran to my car, and left ... We took the decision at the final hour, because the army could have swooped in at any moment,” the 33-year-old said, speaking in eastern Aleppo.

For Ali and thousands of others in the areas that fell to the army in recent days, the danger and deprivatio­n of east Aleppo seem a safer bet than the imprisonme­nt or enlistment into the military that they fear if they moved to government areas.

But as some fled deeper into Aleppo’s remaining rebel districts, others decided instead to risk a perilous crossing of the front lines into government-held parts of the city, seeing it as a safer option than staying with the outgunned rebels.

“I hope Syria will return to the way it was, and people get back security and peace like before,” said Abed al-Salam Ahmad, who crossed to the government sector with his wife and six daughters after their house was hit by a shell.

The former constructi­on worker said conditions were so bad that even animals would not endure them, and that inhabitant­s were badly treated by east Aleppo’s rebels — something the rebels deny. His family fled at dawn, braving gunfire as they crossed the front line.

He spoke to Reuters TV at a disused cotton factory in Aleppo’s Jibreen area, one of two former industrial facilities opened by the government to receive the displaced.

The divergent paths chosen by Ali and Ahmad illustrate the terrifying choices that have faced civilians fleeing one of the most ferocious battles of the Syrian war, with President Bashar Alassad poised for his biggest triumph of the conflict so far.

Both the rebels and the government have accused each other of manipulati­ng Aleppo residents’ fears to their own advantage.

The military say rebels spread false reports of government abuses to deter people from leaving rebel areas. Rebels in turn say that people who speak of mistreatme­nt by insurgents after fleeing their territory are acting out of fear of authoritie­s.

Since the army swept through the northern part of the rebel enclave a week ago, capturing several large, populous districts, at least 30,000 people have fled across the front lines from the rebel areas, the UN’s relief coordinato­r OCHA said.

Thousands of others — the numbers are more difficult to calculate because internatio­nal bodies are not present in rebelheld east Aleppo — retreated further into the insurgents’ sector, including to the dense quarters of the Old City. OCHA estimates 5,000 had been displaced within eastern Aleppo.

The UN envoy for Syria said on Saturday there may still be more than 100,000 people in rebel-held areas. The Britainbas­ed Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights said it could be as many as 200,000.

For those remaining in districts held by rebels, conditions are worsening, aggravated by the shortage of basic goods and the constant danger of bombardmen­t in civilian areas and fighting near the quickly shifting front lines.

“We had a lot of starvation. They were giving us every day or two days a bag of bread, so five loaves of pitta bread,” said a woman who gave the name of Um Ali, or ‘Ali’s mother’, who had fled to the government sector from her home in Jeb al-Qubba district.

After the army has finished checking the identity papers of her and her family, she hopes they can move in with her brother in a western district of Aleppo that is in government hands.

Many of those who chose to remain in rebel areas believe that checks of identity papers are a prelude to mass arrests, torture and extrajudic­ial killing, citing previous media reports of such action — all dismissed by Damascus as fabricated.

The Observator­y said on Wednesday the government had detained hundreds of people. A Syrian military source denied that, and said that while identities were being checked, nobody was being arrested.

Khalil Halabi, 35, a pharmacist from al-Shaar district near the new front line, moved with his wife and children to the rebelheld Old City after what he described as 11 days of escalating bombardmen­t.

“The destructio­n is indescriba­ble — the limbs, burnt limbs. Buildings collapsed and were burned down, mosques were destroyed completely,” he said.

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