Russia-backed govt onslaught displaces 270,000 in southern Syria

Published July 3, 2018
people who fled from Daraa gathering near the Syria-Jordan border.—AP
people who fled from Daraa gathering near the Syria-Jordan border.—AP

DARAA: More than a quarter of a million people have fled a Russian-backed government onslaught on southern Syria, the United Nations said on Monday, in the latest civilian exodus in the seven-year war.

For nearly two weeks, regime forces and their Russian allies have battered rebel-held parts of southern Syria with air strikes, rocket fire, and barrel bombs.

The strategic area was ostensibly protected by a ceasefire agreed by the US, Jordan, and Russia just under a year ago, but President Bashar al-Assad is dead-set on retaking it.

The violence has pushed waves of terrified civilians out of their homes at a shocking rate, the UN’s refugee agency (UNHCR) said on Monday. “We were exp­ecting the number of displaced in southern Syria to reach 200,000, but it has already exceeded 270,000 people in record time,” said UNHCR spokesman in Amman Mohammad Hawari. “We’re facing a real humanitarian crisis in southern Syria,” he said.

According to the UN’s humanitarian coordination office, 70,000 of those displaced have sought shelter along the border with Jordan. They arrived in dilapidated cars piled high with mattresses and suitcases to join thousands already camped out in arid plains near the frontier.

Jordan has kept its border firmly sealed, insisting it cannot handle any more than the 650,000 registered Syrian refugees it already houses, and has instead sent aid into its war-torn neighbour.

Thousands of other displaced have headed west towards the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights, although Israel, too, has pledged to keep its border closed.

‘Divisions among rebel groups’

Those key frontiers are what make Syria’s south a prized area for Assad, in addition to its accessibility to Damascus.

After securing the capital earlier this year, he turned to the south, bombing rebel towns heavily and making significant ground gains.

The government simultaneously also opened negotiations with rebel factions through its ally Russia, offering a halt to bombardment if rebels hand over territory.

More than a dozen towns and villages have agreed to a regime takeover in recent days, doubling the area un­­der government control in the main province of Daraa to 60 percent since operations began on June 19.

But other opposition bodies have rejected the deals.

In a statement on Mon­day, the civilian half of the opposition’s delegation said they had withdrawn from talks.

“We did not attend negotiations today. We were not party to any agreement and we never will be,” said the statement, accusing those who agreed to such handovers of trying to selfishly secure personal interests.

The Britain-based Syrian Observa­tory for Human Rights said on Monday there were “divisions among rebel groups” over whether to agree to the terms proposed by Russia.

Under the deal offered, rebels would hand over medium and heavy weapons and Syrian state institutions would resume work. Displaced families could return with guarantees by Russian military police.

Men who defected from Syria’s armed forces or who did not complete their compulsory service could regularise their status with the regime within six months.

Published in Dawn, July 3rd, 2018

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