The New Zealand Herald

Syrians in Idlib fear end nearing

- Sarah el Deeb

‘There’s nothing now. Nothing at all,” said Yasser Aboud, as he looked away from his family’s few remaining belongings, dumped on the floor of the bare single room that would now be their home in the northwest Syrian city of Idlib.

It was a far cry from the house, the farm, and the job that he, his wife and three children left behind two months ago, fleeing their hometown just 15km down the road as it was overwhelme­d by Syrian government troops in furious fighting.

He managed to salvage some jerrycans of olives, a few rugs, cushions and pots and pans, and his motorbike. They sold their washing machine and some of his wife’s gold.

Now they were moving into an apartment in a district full of buildings shattered by government bombardmen­t. The little family will share the place with more than a dozen relatives. They’re jobless in a city teeming with thousands of others displaced like them — and they are hardly out of danger.

The city of Idlib is the last urban area still under opposition control in Syria, located in a shrinking rebel enclave in the northweste­rn province of the same name.

Syria’s civil war, which entered its 10th year yesterday, has shrunk in geographic­al scope — focusing on this tiny corner of the country — but the misery wreaked by the conflict has not diminished.

A bloodier and possibly more disastrous phase is on the horizon if government forces, backed by Russia and Iran, go ahead with threats to recapture Idlib city and the remaining rebel-held north, crammed with more than 3 million people.

Over the past three months, government troops recaptured nearly half of Idlib province and surroundin­g areas, forcing nearly 1 million to flee their homes, around half of them into other parts of the province, including Idlib city. During the advances, government forces neared Idlib city outskirts, bombing parts and sending thousands fleeing north.

“I feel everything has ended, and this is a final migration, not displaceme­nt,” Aboud said. “I feel let down by the world.”

The government offensive has been paused by a Russian-Turkish cease-fire deal, leaving residents of the rebel enclave, including Idlib city, in a state of terrifying limbo.

They are sceptical that the ceasefire will last and well aware they are likely the next target of the Government’s assault.

Though government airstrikes have hit it regularly, the city has suffered far less violence than other places since 2015, when rebels seized it from government forces. Over the years since, multiple waves of displaced people flowed in, from other opposition areas further south retaken by the Government, and now more from other parts of Idlib.

The Associated Press travelled to Idlib on a trip arranged through Turkish authoritie­s. Its team, like other journalist­s who have been into the enclave recently, was escorted by members of a media outfit linked to Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, an al Qaedalinke­d group that dominates the area.

Driving into Idlib city, the AP team witnessed the scale of the displaceme­nt. Dozens of tents lined the main road into the city. Other families were crammed into bombed-out buildings, the city’s stadium or unfinished constructi­on sites. Shops have sprung around the enclave bearing the names of different cities and towns in Syria — a testimony and a token to the homes they left behind.

The city has been shaped by the different layers of conflict. Many city streets are clean and well maintained by the opposition administra­tion. But on other streets, buildings are in ruins — some wrecked in previous fighting, others bombed during the most recent offensive.

Residents can point out buildings and remember the date they were hit. The city gets only two hours of electricit­y a day, and Aboud said he chose to buy bread over more power from generators.

If President Bashar Assad resumes the government offensive, everything here will be vulnerable.

In past advances, the Government’s tactic was to bombard urban areas relentless­ly — including with Russian warplanes — flattening residentia­l areas and pummelling the population into submission.

Residents, opposition activists and fighters were offered the choice either to stay under “reconcilia­tion”

deals or be evacuated to the rebelheld north. In Idlib, the residents overwhelmi­ngly fear living under government rule but have nowhere else to run, with Turkey refusing to open its border wall to more refugees.

Aboud said it was out of the question for him to accept “reconcilia­tion”. Holding his 2-year-old twins by the hand, he said his family fled his hometown of Saraqeb “not fearing death but fearing to be under the rule of Assad again”.

He took part in the early antiGovern­ment protests in 2011 and was detained for it; two of his brothers were shot and killed by government forces in 2012; his mother-in-law was killed in an airstrike the same year.

If Assad captures Idlib, “we will run to Turkey, we will sleep under the [border] wall,” Aboud said. “The most crucial thing is that we won’t enter territorie­s” held by the Government.

Turkey has deployed thousands of troops in the enclave, operating alongside its Syrian opposition allies.

That has diminished the lock on power that the al Qaeda-linked Hayat Tahrir al-Sham has held over Idlib since it drove out rival factions in past fighting.

Mustafa Berro, a commander of a Turkey-backed rebel faction from Aleppo that has now sent forces to Idlib, said his fighters have not lost faith. “We are worse off than in 2014” — when rebels held nearly half of Syria — “but we are better off than 2011” when they had no territory to control, he said.

The massive displaceme­nt of past weeks has strained internatio­nal aid deliveries into the enclave, where 1.5 million receive food assistance.

In January alone, 1227 trucks were sent across the border from Turkey, the largest number in seven years of cross-border operations, said UN Assistant Secretary of State Kevin Kennedy, who is also regional humanitari­an co-ordinator for Syria.

The cease-fire has allowed deliveries to increase, but Kennedy warned that resumption of hostilitie­s in the densely populated urban area would mean more displaceme­nt.

“The needs are so enormous, the gaps will always be there unfortunat­ely,” he said.

In the centre of Idlib city, nearly 90 displaced families found refuge in a deserted prison. They fled here from Maaret al-Numan, a key town in Idlib that fell to government forces in January.

Families, men and women, live on top of each other in the prison rooms, divided into sleeping, cooking and bathing areas by hung sheets and blankets, giving a deceptive sense of privacy.

Fida, 44, and her 20-year old daughter Heba share a room with 11 other relatives. A younger brother of Heba who lost a foot in a war injury slept in the room behind the “kitchen”.

A baby with Down syndrome slept in his cradle next to the women cooking.

“We don’t like the word displaceme­nt,” Fida said. Her daughter added: “It’s shameful. We like our hometown.”

Heba said she can’t forget a single day since 2011 — every day marked by violence and loss. She worried about her children, a 3- and a 2-yearold, and can’t let them go outside because of airstrikes.

“We sleep in fear,” she said. “I don’t imagine there will be a future. I don’t imagine this will be settled with us alive.”

I don’t imagine there will be a future. I don’t imagine this will be settled with us alive.

Fida, an Idlib resident

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 ?? Photo / AP ?? Women walk in a neighbourh­ood heavily damaged by airstrikes in Idlib, Syria.
Photo / AP Women walk in a neighbourh­ood heavily damaged by airstrikes in Idlib, Syria.

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