Syrian rebels fear assault on besieged
Daraya as residents starve
Send a link to a friend
[May 17, 2016]
By Suleiman Al-Khalidi and Lisa Barrington
AMMAN/BEIRUT (Reuters) - Rebel fighters
and officials in a besieged Syrian town on the outskirts of Damascus
believe government forces are preparing an assault after they turned
back an aid convoy last week.
|
Rebel fighters walk past a Syrian Arab Red Crescent aid convoy heading
towards the villages of al-Foua and Kefraya in Idlib province, Syria
March 17, 2016. REUTERS/Ammar Abdullah |
Daraya, situated close to a large air base and just a few
kilometers (miles) from President Bashar al-Assad's palace, had seen
little violence since a broader cessation of hostilities agreement
came into effect at the end of February.
But, with the truce rapidly unraveling across Syria, government
forces began shelling the town on Thursday after refusing entry to
the first aid convoy it would have ever received.
Known for its peaceful protests in the early days of the uprising
against Assad, Daraya has been besieged and regularly bombed since
2012.
"Large convoys of (government) troops are moving from the airport
and from Ashrafiyat Sahnaya (the next town south)," said Abu Samer,
spokesman for the Liwa Shuhada al-Islam rebel group.
"We are prepared to repel their assault but our main fear is for the
civilians besieged in the town who face severe shortages of food."
A Syrian military source denied rebel accounts of troop deployments,
saying nothing had changed in the area.
Despite there being only around 8,000 residents and about 1,000
fighters left in the town, the Syrian army has not been able to
establish control of the area.
"Our monitoring showed there were heavy vehicle deployments on the
southern edge of the city," said Liwa Shuhada al-Islam head Colonel
Said Naqrash.
"The regime is continuing to pour in more equipment, fighters... All
these movements indicate that the regime is planning something."
Daraya is controlled by two main rebel groups, Liwa Shuhada al Islam
and Itihad al-Islami Ajnad al-Sham, drawn from local residents.
Radical Islamist fighters are not believed to be among them.
"The Free Syrian Army is abiding by the ceasefire and only repelling
attacks," said Daraya activist Fadi Dirani.
Abu Yamen, a member of the town council, said such concentrations of
troops had not been seen since before the truce.
[to top of second column] |
BURNT CROPS
The United Nations said this month that Syria's government was
refusing U.N. demands to deliver aid to hundreds of thousands of
people.
They include the residents of Daraya, where the struggle for
survival has become even more desperate since government forces cut
its link with neighboring rebel-held Mouadamiya about six months
ago.
"The army has burnt the wheat and barley," Naqrash said.
In April, a group called Women of Daraya wrote an open letter saying
the town was on the verge of starvation, with people cooking "soups
made purely of spices in order to stave off hunger."
The aid convoy blocked last week would have been the first delivered
since the siege began.
But even then it was not allowed to contain food, only medical and
other aid, and residents launched an online campaign ahead of the
expected delivery with the slogan: "We cannot eat medicine".
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said clashes broke out
around the besieged town and government forces started shelling
after the convoy was turned back.
Daraya's local council said on its Facebook page on Saturday it was
"extremely worried" about a new military offensive, having seen
reconnaissance aircraft overhead and troops gathering south of the
town.
(Reporting by Lisa Barrington; editing by John Stonestreet)
[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|