Daily Dispatch

Aleppo evacuation­s resume

Shi’ites in two villages also moved to safety

-

CONVOYS of evacuees travelled from a rebelheld area of Aleppo and from two Shi’ite villages besieged by insurgents yesterday after a days-long standoff.

Dozens of buses carrying thousands of people from Aleppo’s tiny rebel zone reached insurgent areas of countrysid­e to the west of the city, according to a UN official and monitoring group the Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights.

At the same time, 10 buses left the Shi’ite Muslim villages of al-Foua and Kefraya, north of Idlib, for government lines in Aleppo, the sources said.

The evacuation of civilians, including wounded people, from the two villages which have been besieged by rebels for years was a condition for the Syrian army and its allies to allow thousands of fighters and civilians trapped in Aleppo to depart.

“First limited evacuation­s, finally . . . from east Aleppo and Foua and Kefraya. Many thousands more are waiting to be evacuated soon,” Jan Egeland, who chairs the UN aid task force in Syria, tweeted late on Sunday night.

Syrian state TV and pro-Damascus stations showed the first four buses arriving in Aleppo from the besieged villages, accompanie­d by pick-up trucks and with people sitting on their roofs.

Later yesterday, the Security Council was to vote in New York on a resolution to allow UN staff to monitor the evacuation­s.

The draft resolution was the result of a compromise between Russia and France, and the US said it was expected to pass unanimousl­y.

On Sunday, some of the buses sent to al-Foua and Kefraya to carry evacuees out were attacked and torched by armed men, who shouted “God is greatest” and brandished their weapons in front of the burning vehicles, according to a video posted online.

That incident threatened to derail the evacuation­s, the result of intense negotiatio­ns between Russia – the main supporter of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad – and Turkey, which backs some large rebel groups.

At stake is the fate of thousands of people still stuck in the last rebel bastion in Aleppo after a series of sudden advances by the Syrian army and allied Shi’ite militias under an intense bombardmen­t that pulverised large sections of the city.

They have been waiting for the chance to leave Aleppo since the ceasefire and evacuation deal was agreed late last Tuesday, but have struggled to do so during days of hold-ups.

Assad is backed in the war by Russian air power and Shi’ite militias including Lebanon’s Hezbollah movement and Iraq’s Harakat al-Nujaba. The mostly Sunni rebels include groups supported by Turkey, the US and Gulf monarchies.

In the square in Aleppo’s Sukari district, organisers gave every family a number to allow them access to buses. Thousands of people were evacuated on Thursday, the first to leave under the ceasefire deal that ends fighting in the city where violence erupted in 2012, a year after the start of conflict in other parts of Syria. They were taken to rebel-held districts of the countrysid­e west of Aleppo.

Turkey has said Aleppo evacuees could also be housed in a camp to be constructe­d in Syria near the Turkish border to the north.

For four years the city was split between a rebel-held eastern sector and the government-held western districts. — Reuters

 ?? Picture: EPA ?? ANTI-MOSCOW DEMONSTRAT­ION: Indonesian Muslim activists at a rally against Russia's involvemen­t in the siege of Aleppo hold banners and shout anti-Russia slogans in front of the Russian embassy in Jakarta, Indonesia, yesterday
Picture: EPA ANTI-MOSCOW DEMONSTRAT­ION: Indonesian Muslim activists at a rally against Russia's involvemen­t in the siege of Aleppo hold banners and shout anti-Russia slogans in front of the Russian embassy in Jakarta, Indonesia, yesterday

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa