Rebels call for 5-day Aleppo truce, evacuation of civilians

Rebels call for 5-day Aleppo truce, evacuation of civilians

December 08, 2016
Residents walk near damaged buildings in the Old City of Aleppo on Tuesday. — AFP
Residents walk near damaged buildings in the Old City of Aleppo on Tuesday. — AFP





ALEPPO — Syrian rebels in Aleppo city called Wednesday for an immediate five-day truce and the evacuation of civilians to other opposition-held territory in the northern province, a statement said.

The initiative, which comes after government forces seized three-quarters of the former rebel bastion in east Aleppo, was approved by all factions in the city, a representative from one group told AFP.

It calls for an "immediate five-day humanitarian ceasefire" as well as the UN-supervised evacuation of people requiring urgent medical care, who it says number around 500 people.

And it calls for "the evacuation of civilians who wish to leave besieged east Aleppo to the northern Aleppo province countryside," where rebels still hold pockets of territory.

It rules out the evacuation of civilians to neighboring Idlib province, where many civilians and surrendering rebels have taken refuge after leaving territory recaptured by the government elsewhere in the country.

"Idlib province is no longer a safe area because of Russian and regime bombardment," it said.

The initiative makes no mention of the fate of the rebels remaining in the city, who have said previously they will not evacuate.

Instead, it calls for "negotiations on the future of the city" to begin after the "easing of the humanitarian situation in east Aleppo".

Yasser Al-Youssef of the Nureddin Al-Zinki rebel group confirmed that the statement had been approved by all factions in east Aleppo, including Fateh Al-Sham, the former Al-Qaeda affiliate previously known as Al-Nusra Front.

At least 80,000 people have already fled eastern neighborhoods for territory controlled by the government or Kurds elsewhere in the city, according to a monitor. More have fled south, to remaining rebel-held areas in the city.

East Aleppo fell to rebels in 2012 and has been under government siege since mid-July, with international aid now exhausted and food supplies limited.

More than 250,000 civilians were estimated to be in east Aleppo before the latest government offensive began in mid-November.

Figures for the number of rebels in the east before the offensive began range between around 8,000 to 15,000.

Meanwhile, Ankara claimed that it was doing "everything possible" to facilitate negotiations between Moscow and Syrian opposition groups to halt the bloodshed in Aleppo.

"We are doing everything possible to bring about contacts between opposition representatives and Russia and have achieved very good success on this score," Prime Minister Binali Yildirim told Russia's Interfax news agency.

"If any consensus reached is turned into a signed document then that would be to everyone's benefit. Now is the time when you need to get results," Yildirim said in comments translated into Russian.

Yildirim on Tuesday met with President Vladimir Putin in the Kremlin as Moscow and Ankara continue moves to put a furious row over Turkey's downing of a Russian warplane last year behind them.

A source told AFP in late November that Russian representatives had met with Syrian rebels in Turkey with Ankara's mediation to discuss the possibility of a truce in the divided city of Aleppo, but they failed to reached a deal.

Syrian government forces have since reclaimed more of the rebel stronghold in eastern Aleppo in a sweeping advance that has drawn condemnation from the West. — Agencies


December 08, 2016
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