Evacuation of three Syrian towns begins

This photo released on Sunday, Dec 13, 2015 by the Douma Revolution News Network on their Facebook page, shows Syrians trying to extinguish fire that was caused by Syrian government aerial bombardment on the Damascus suburb of Douma, Syria.

This photo released on Sunday, Dec 13, 2015 by the Douma Revolution News Network on their Facebook page, shows Syrians trying to extinguish fire that was caused by Syrian government aerial bombardment on the Damascus suburb of Douma, Syria.


The evacuation of more than 450 fighters and civilians including wounded started Monday from three Syrian towns under a rare deal between the regime and rebels, a monitor said.

In September, both sides reached an agreement for a six-month truce in Zabadani, the last rebel bastion on Syria’s border with Lebanon, and in Fuaa and Kafraya, the last two government-held Shiite villages in northwestern Idlib province.

The U.N.-brokered deal provided for a ceasefire to allow in humanitarian aid and then for the evacuation of wounded civilians and fighters.

“More than 120 fighters and wounded have started to leave Zabadani” to other rebel-held areas in Syria via Lebanon and Turkey, Observatory head Rami Abdel Rahman said.

About “335 people, including civilians” have started to leave Fuaa and Kafraya to return to regime-held areas, also via the two neighbouring countries, he said.

Those evacuated from Fuaa and Kafraya will travel to Turkey via the Syrian-Turkish border post of al-Hawa before flying to Beirut airport then travelling over land to Damascus, he said.

Those leaving from Zabadani will travel across the border to Lebanon and fly from Beirut to Turkey, before travelling back to opposition-held areas in Syria, he said.

A deal to evacuate thousands of jihadists and civilians from southern Damascus was apparently derailed on Saturday after the death of rebel chief Zahran Alloush.

President Bashar al-Assad’s regime has previously agreed to several ceasefires with rebel groups.

These “local reconciliation” deals usually provide for rebels to lay down their weapons in exchange for allowing in humanitarian aid to inhabitants living under siege.

More than 250,000 people have died in Syria since the beginning of the nearly five-year war.


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