Violence rages in Syria as Putin orders ‘humanitarian pause’
● Airstrikes kill at least 14 as ground offensive starts in rebel-held suburb
Syrian forces launched a ground offensive yesterday on a rebel-held eastern Damascus suburb despite a United Nations Security Council resolution demanding a 30-day cease-fire across Syria.
The UN chief denounced the violence in the embattled region, describing it as “hell on Earth”.
The offensive was accompanied by airstrikes that killed at least 14 people, according to opposition activists, and the new fighting in eastern Ghouta did not bode well for the resolution adopted over the weekend at the UN.
There was a relative calm in the besieged area in the immediate aftermath of the resolution, which was unanimously approved on Saturday. It demands a 30-day truce in all of Syria but excludes fighting with the Islamic State group and al-qaeda-linked fighters.
However, violence has since picked up with 28 people in the area killed in airstrikes and bombardments on Sunday and yesterday, activists said.
Russian news agencies said that president Vladimir Putin has ordered a daily “humanitarian pause” in eastern Ghouta between 9am and 2pm (7am and noon GMT) to allow residents to leave if they want.
Russia’s defence minister Sergei Shoigu said in a statement the pauses will start as of today. He said Russia will work to create a “humanitarian corridor” to help evacuate civilians but said the location has not been decided yet.
Mr Shoigu also mentioned a refugee camp in Tanf, near the border with Iraq which is “under US control” - where Russia is also suggesting calling for a humanitarian pause as well.
UN Secretary-general Antonio Guterres appealed to the warring sides to abide by the ceasefire. Speaking at the start of a session of the Un-backed Human Rights Council, the comments were his first remarks to the UN body since the resolution was adopted.
“Eastern Ghouta cannot wait,” he said. “It is high time to stop this hell on Earth.”
Mr Guterres said he welcomes the resolution but added that council resolutions “are only meaningful if they are effectively implemented.” He added that he expects the “resolution to be immediately implemented and sustained” and also called for safe, unimpeded and sustained delivery of humanitarian aid and services, as well as evacuations of the sick and wounded.
At the Geneva gathering, UN human rights chief Zeid Ra’ad al-hussein echoed calls for a “full implementation” of the truce but said that “however, we have every reason to remain cautious” about the cease-fire as airstrikes continue on Damascus suburbs.
He also decried “seven years of failure to stop the violence, seven years of unremitting and frightful mass killing” in Syria.
In Syria, state TV broadcast live footage showing the town of Harasta being pounded by airstrikes and artillery. The TV said troops were targeting al-qaeda-linked fighter in the area in an apparent move to show that the army is not violating the cease-fire.
Yesterday’s fighting was mostly concentrated in an area known as Harasta Farms, on the edge of town.
The opposition’s Syrian Civil Defence, also known as White Helmets, said 13 died in an airstrike on Douma and one person was killed in Harasta. The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights put the death toll at 22 yesterday, including 21 in the eastern suburb of Douma. Syrian state media said nearly 50 shells fired by rebels hit the capital wounding at least one person.
The 14 people killed in eastern Ghouta on Sunday included an infant who was allegedly killed in a poison gas attack on the town of Sheifouniyeh. The opposition’s Syrian Civil Defence said the attack killed a child and that several people and paramedics had breathing difficulties.