Kuwait Times

Evacuation­s resume after deadly bombing

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Evacuation­s of thousands of besieged Syrians resumed yesterday with tight security in place after a weekend bombing against those leaving government-held areas killed dozens, including nearly 70 children. A large convoy of buses set out from the government-held towns of Fuaa and Kafraya in Idlib province, carrying 3,000 people to the rebel-held transit point of Rashidin near Aleppo, an AFP correspond­ent said.

At the same time, 11 buses carrying around 300 people left rebel-held Zabadani, Serghaya and Jabal Sharqi in Damascus province, the Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights monitor said. In Rashidin, security was tight after a devastatin­g bomb attack on evacuees at the site on Saturday that according to the Observator­y killed 126 people, including 68 children. Most of the dead were from the two Shiite-majority towns, with a handful of aid workers and rebels guarding the convoy also killed. Dozens of wounded were taken to hospitals in nearby rebel-held territory, while others were taken to Aleppo, which government forces regained full control of late last year.

‘I left for my children’

Armed rebels were standing guard at Rashidin yesterday and carefully inspecting vehicles arriving in the area. “We chose a different location as the gathering point for fighters from Fuaa and Kafraya with their families, because we are obliged to protect them until they leave here,” said rebel fighter Abu Obeida Al-Shami.

Buses were parked in a semi-circle, forming a makeshift barrier around an area in the centre of a lot where evacuees including dozens of children milled. “Where do I even start? It would have been easier if we had just died. Death is so much easier than this humiliatio­n,” said elderly evacuee Abu Ahmad. He told AFP he was preparing himself never to see his hometown of Fuaa again. “Someone like me, who is already 85 years old-I’m going to die tomorrow or the day after.”

Pro-government militiamen among those being evacuated from Fuaa and Kafraya squatted next to one bus, smoking cigarettes. Standing nearby, 55-yearold Um Joud from Fuaa said it was difficult to describe how she felt. “I’m not afraid, because everything is in God’s hands,” she told AFP. “Of course I would have preferred to stay in my home, but I left for the sake of my children and their lives and futures.”

The evacuation­s are part of a deal between government and opposition representa­tives that is also seeing residents and rebels transporte­d out from several areas under regime siege near Damascus, primarily Madaya and Zabadani. It was brokered late last month by Qatar, a longtime opposition supporter, and Iran, a key regime ally, but its implementa­tion had been repeatedly delayed.

When yesterday’s evacuation­s are complete, a total of 8,000 people should have left Fuaa and Kafraya in exchange for 2,500 civilians and rebels from opposition areas. Zabadani and Madaya “are now empty of any rebel presence,” said Mayyada AlAswad, a member of the coordinati­ng committee for the operation on the government side.

Yesterday’s evacuation­s mark the end of the first stage of the deal, with a second phase due to begin in June. Fuaa and Kafraya will be emptied entirely, with residents and fighters heading to Aleppo and then on to government-held Latakia or Damascus. All rebels are expected to leave Madaya, Zabadani, and other nearby opposition­s-held areas, but civilians who want to remain may do so. Those leaving rebel-held areas will head to Idlib province, which is held by an opposition alliance. —AFP

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