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Tearful Syrians in rebel enclave begin new evacuation plan

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ARBIN: Weeping Syrians boarded buses to leave a ravaged pocket of Eastern Ghouta on Sunday, in a new wave of evacuations to clear another part of the former rebel bastion.


Five weeks since the Syrian forces launched an all-out assault on Ghouta, it holds more than 90 per cent of the onetime opposition stronghold on the edge of Damascus.


To help it capture the rest, key government backer Russia has mediated talks with various rebel groups to negotiate withdrawals from the three remaining pockets.


One area was emptied under such a deal in recent days and evacuations began late on Saturday for a second part, held by the Faylaq al Rahman rebel faction.


That agreement is set to see some 7,000 rebels and civilians bussed from the towns of Arbin and Zamalka and the district of Jobar to the rebel-dominated province of Idlib in northwestern Syria.


After hours of delay, around 980 of them quit Ghouta on Saturday night aboard 17 buses and several ambulances. They arrived in part of Hama province near the border with Idlib on Sunday morning.


Devastated Syrian civilians and rebel fighters dressed in black gathered in the early morning in the main streets of Arbin, AFP’s correspondent there said.


They carried duffel bags and dragged suitcases stuffed to the brim as they shuffled past ruined buildings.


By mid-morning, around 20 empty buses and ambulances had entered the town, parking at a large roundabout.


Fighters and civilians began to board, bidding tearful goodbyes to their home towns before they headed to opposition territory further north.


Hamza Abbas, an opposition activist in the nearby town of Zamalka, said he was planning to board the buses too.


“People are very sad about leaving their homes, their land, their childhood memories and the place where they spent the best days of their childhood,” he said.


“They have no money, no houses, no furniture or even clothes to take with them because of this bombardment.”


As part of Faylaq al Rahman’s deal with Moscow, residents had been offered the option to stay in Zamalka and Arbin as the area fell under regime control.


But Abbas said he would not.


“I decided to leave Ghouta because how am I supposed to live alongside someone who killed my family, my siblings, my friends? With someone who destroyed me, my life, and my future?”


Since it began on February 18, the Ghouta assault has left more than 1,600 civilians dead and thousands more wounded, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.


Even before the onslaught, the enclave’s 400,000 residents had suffered for half a decade under a crippling siege that severely limited their access to food, medicine and other basic goods.


The Syrian government has used siege tactics followed by heavy bombardment and negotiated settlements to recapture swathes territory it had lost to rebels.


Damascus and Moscow have applied this “leave or die” strategy to Ghouta as well, smashing the enclave into three isolated pockets before seeking separate evacuation deals for each one.


Under the first Russian-brokered deal in the region, hardline group Ahrar al Sham agreed to quit the town of Harasta. — AFP


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