Muscat Daily

Syria regime prepares evacuation, eyes total reconquest of Ghouta

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Wafideen Checkpoint, Syria - Buses entered the last rebel holdout of Syria’s Eastern Ghouta on Tuesday in preparatio­n for a possible second day of evacuation­s as the regime eyed the total reconquest of the enclave.

Evacuation­s of Jaish al Islam fighters and their families from the former bastion’s main town of Douma started on Monday under a Russia-brokered deal.

Jaish al Islam has not yet confirmed the accord, amid reports hardliners within the group were refusing to leave their positions.

The reported deal is the latest in a string of agreements that have seen tens of thousands of people - rebels and civilians - leave the one-time stronghold outside Damascus for the north of the country.

Russia-backed regime forces have retaken control of 95 per cent of Eastern Ghouta since February 18 through a combinatio­n of a deadly air and ground assault and evacuation deals.

The reconquest of Eastern Ghouta would mark a major milestone in President Bashar Assad’s efforts to regain control of territory seized by rebels during Syria’s seven-year civil war.

Buses entered the enclave on Tuesday to prepare for a second day of evacuation­s, a military source and the Britain-based Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights monitoring group said.

But there were no reports of any having exited at the start of the afternoon.

“The operation could continue

today or not. There are divisions among the Jaish al Islam group on their leaving but we are continuing preparatio­ns," the military source told AFP.

In a first wave of the evacuation­s from Douma under the deal, more than 1,100 people - Jaish al Islam fighters and family members - set off late on Monday to the rebel-held town of Jarabulus in northern Syria, state news agency SANA said.

In the morning, an AFP reporter saw dozens of empty buses waiting by the side of the highway and near a government­held checkpoint used by the buses to enter and exit Eastern

Ghouta.

The Observator­y, which relies on sources on the ground, said the evacuation­s were set to continue on Tuesday but that divisions continued within the group.

“There is still a hardline wing in Jaish al Islam that refuses the deal,” Observator­y chief Rami Abdel Rahman said.

Jaish al Islam has around 10,000 fighters in its ranks, the Observator­y says.

In video footage published by the group online on Sunday, leader Essam al Buidani told men in a mosque: “We will stay in this town and will not leave.”

But ‘those who want to leave

should leave’, he said.

Monday's evacuation came after more than 46,000 people - including fighters from other areas of Eastern Ghouta - left on buses to the northweste­rn province of Idlib, the last in Syria to remain largely outside regime control.

Backed by Russia, Assad’s forces have scored a series of victories over rebel forces in recent years, often through campaigns of siege, aerial bombardmen­t and ground offensives that have drawn widespread internatio­nal condemnati­on.

Before February 18, some 400,000 people in Eastern Gh-

outa had lived under regime siege for five years, facing severe food and medicine shortages.

On Tuesday, SANA quoted a military source as saying more than 40,000 people have returned to their homes in areas of the former rebel enclave.

Rebels have left behind a labyrinth of tunnels under Eastern Ghouta, fitted with hospitals and military headquarte­rs, and some of them wide enough to drive a car through.

SANA said the military also found two undergroun­d field hospitals, equipped with medical equipment and medicine.

 ?? (AFP) ?? A convoy transporti­ng Jaish al Islam fighters and their families arrives at the entrance to the northern Syrian city of Aleppo after being evacuated from the town of Douma in the last rebel-held pocket of Eastern Ghouta on Tuesday
(AFP) A convoy transporti­ng Jaish al Islam fighters and their families arrives at the entrance to the northern Syrian city of Aleppo after being evacuated from the town of Douma in the last rebel-held pocket of Eastern Ghouta on Tuesday

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