Aleppo burns as incendiary bombs rain on rebel areas

Published September 23, 2016
Homs: Syrian government buses evacuate residents from Al-Waer, the last rebel-held neighbourhood of this city, on Thursday. Syrian state TV said buses have evacuated 103 gunmen and 158 women, children, and older men. They are part of an agreement between rebels and the authorities to lift a government blockade on the neighbourhood that has been enforced since November 2013. They were transferred to the northern Homs countryside, and will be bussed to rebel-held Idlib on Saturday. An estimated 75,000 residents are still in the neighbourhood, with dwindling supplies of food and medicine.—AP
Homs: Syrian government buses evacuate residents from Al-Waer, the last rebel-held neighbourhood of this city, on Thursday. Syrian state TV said buses have evacuated 103 gunmen and 158 women, children, and older men. They are part of an agreement between rebels and the authorities to lift a government blockade on the neighbourhood that has been enforced since November 2013. They were transferred to the northern Homs countryside, and will be bussed to rebel-held Idlib on Saturday. An estimated 75,000 residents are still in the neighbourhood, with dwindling supplies of food and medicine.—AP

ALEPPO: Huge blazes erupted in Syria’s Aleppo as the city was rocked by fighting and air strikes on Thursday, ahead of last-ditch efforts by world powers to salvage a failed ceasefire.

Key players in the Syrian peace process planned to meet in New York, with the clock ticking down as the UN warned undelivered aid for desperate civilians in Aleppo would expire in four days.

The truce deal brokered by Moscow and Washington fell apart earlier this week, ushering in a surge of fighting on all major fronts of Syria’s five-year civil war.

Heavy clashes gripped the outskirts of Aleppo on Thursday, after air strikes triggered major fires across the city’s devastated rebel-held districts.

An eyewitness in the eastern Bustan al Qasr neighbourhood reported that his entire street was in flames following the pre-dawn strikes.

Volunteer firefighters battled throughout the night to contain the blazes, which local activists at the Aleppo Media Centre said were caused by “incendiary phosphorous bombs”.

In footage posted by the group, a ball of flame shoots up over the city, lighting up the skyline and sparking fires on the horizon.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said strikes on the rebel-held neighbourhoods of Bustan al Qasr and Al Kalasseh “led to massive fires” overnight.

Observatory head Rami Abdel Rahman said they were “the most intense strikes in months” on those two districts. He said raids by Russian warplanes on Thursday killed 13 people, including three women, in the city.

`Assad, do your bit’: “The non-stop strikes last night were so violent I can’t even describe them,” said Ibrahim Abu al Leith, spokesman for the White Helmets, a prominent Syrian group of emergency responders.

One volunteer was wounded in the strikes and ensuing fires, Abu al Leith said.

The White Helmets on Thursday won the Right Livelihood Award “for their outstanding bravery, compassion and humanitarian engagement”, announced the jury for the Swedish human rights award, known as the “alternative Nobel prize”.

Residents of east Aleppo’s have been living under government siege since early September.

AID STALLED: Food aid promised for them under the US-Russia deal has been stalled at the border since last week and will go bad in just a few days.

“Forty trucks are sitting at the Turkish-Syrian border. The food will be expiring on Monday,” the head of the UN humanitarian taskforce for Syria, Jan Egeland, told reporters in Geneva.

“The drivers are sleeping at the border and they have done so now for now a week, so please, President Assad, do your bit to enable us to get to eastern Aleppo and also the other besieged areas,” Egeland said in a direct appeal to Syrian President Bashar al Assad.

The UN resumed its aid deliveries on Thursday after a brief pause in the wake of a strike on a humanitarian convoy in Syria’s north that killed 20 civilians and destroyed 18 aid trucks.

Thursday’s aid was going “to people in a besieged area of rural Damascus”, said UN humanitarian agency spokesman Jens Laerke.

Diplomatic efforts to end the war were set to continue in New York with another meeting of the International Syria Support Group (ISSG), chaired by Moscow and Washington.

Sounding a cautious note before the talks, John Kerry said: “It’s going to be difficult. We’ll see what people are willing to do.”

During an address to the UN Security Council on Wednesday, Kerry urged Russia to force Damascus to ground its warplanes after Monday’s deadly raid on the aid convoy.

Moscow denies that Russian or Syrian planes carried out the raid and instead said a coalition drone was in the area when the aid trucks were hit.

Published in Dawn, September 23rd, 2016

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