World

Syrian rebels withdraw from enclave northeast of Damascus

April 21, 2018
A picture taken in the Syrian city of Azaz in the northern countryside of Aleppo shows members of the Turkish-backed Syrian rebel police directing buses carrying evacuees from Dumayr, a town lying east of Damascus further from Eastern Ghouta where a reconciliation agreement had kept a security status quo since 2016 until it was retaken by government forces the day before. A convoy of 31 buses was carrying about 1600 of fighters and civilians arrived in Azaz, while most of the buses headed to Afrin.  — AFP
A picture taken in the Syrian city of Azaz in the northern countryside of Aleppo shows members of the Turkish-backed Syrian rebel police directing buses carrying evacuees from Dumayr, a town lying east of Damascus further from Eastern Ghouta where a reconciliation agreement had kept a security status quo since 2016 until it was retaken by government forces the day before. A convoy of 31 buses was carrying about 1600 of fighters and civilians arrived in Azaz, while most of the buses headed to Afrin. — AFP

BEIRUT/AMMAN — Syrian rebels began withdrawing from an enclave northeast of Damascus on Saturday and will go to northern Syria, state TV and a rebel official said.

The withdrawal will restore state control over the eastern Qalamoun enclave, some 40 km (25 miles) from Damascus.

Assad, backed by Russia and Iran, is seeking to wipe out the last few rebel enclaves near Damascus, building on momentum from the defeat of the insurgency in Eastern Ghouta, which was the last major opposition stronghold near the capital.

State TV said rebel fighters and their families would be transported from eastern Qalamoun to Idlib and Jarablus, a rebel-held territory at the border with Turkey.

The spokesman for one of the rebel groups in eastern Qalamoun said the insurgents had agreed to the deal after intensified Russian shelling killed six people in areas near the town of Al-Ruhaiba earlier this week.

"This made the Free (Syrian) Army factions sit at the negotiating table with the Russian side and an agreement was reached the most important articles of which are the surrender of heavy weapons and the departure of fighters to the north," Said Seif of the Ahmad Abdo Martyr brigade said.

A first convoy of 10 buses had left Ruhaiba and was being searched in a nearby area before continuing to the north.

Meanwhile, the Syrian military and its allies pressed the bombardment of a besieged enclave south of Damascus.

State TV footage showed clouds of smoke rising from Al-Hajar Al-Aswad district, part of an enclave including the Palestinian Yarmouk camp.

UNRWA, the UN agency that cares for Palestinian refugees, has said it is deeply concerned about the fate of civilians including some 12,000 Palestinian refugees in Yarmouk and the surrounding areas.

"Displacement continues with people moving to the neighboring area of Yalda ... to escape the fighting. Some families are staying in Yarmouk, either because they cannot move due to the intensity of fighting or because they choose to remain," UNRWA spokesman Chris Gunness said.

"We don't have any numbers on how many people have moved but the humanitarian situation of those in both Yarmouk and Yalda is intolerable."

Although the conquest of eastern Qalamoun and the enclave south of Damascus will leave just one remaining besieged rebel enclave, north of the city of Homs, large parts of Syria at the borders with Jordan, Israel, Turkey and Iraq remain outside Assad's control, however.

Anti-Assad rebels hold a chunk of territory in the southwest and the northwest, and Kurdish-led militias, backed by the United States, control an expanse of northern and eastern Syria. — Reuters


April 21, 2018
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