Party cups as gas masks: Idlib civilians
prepare for battle
Send a link to a friend
[September 06, 2018]
IDLIB, Syria (Reuters) - Hudhayfa
al-Shahad strapped a colorful paper cup filled with cotton and charcoal
to a child's face and tightened a plastic bag around his head: an
improvised gas mask if chemicals once again fall on Syria's Idlib.
Civilians in Syria's last major stronghold of active opposition to
President Bashar al-Assad's rule are preparing food and digging shelters
ahead of an expected army offensive.
They are also putting their faith in neighboring Turkey's diplomacy to
spare them from military action, which could become a humanitarian
disaster.
"We are preparing what little we can: small primitive masks we can place
on our children's mouths in case we are hit with chemicals," 20-year-old
Shahad told Reuters from his village south of Idlib city, where he
shares a house with his pregnant wife, three children and around 15
other people.
His brother, 35-year-old construction worker Ahmed Abdulkarim al-Shahad,
shows off the cavernous space under a cool, vine-covered courtyard the
family has been digging and sheltering in from bombardment since 2012.
"Military preparations as we have seen are in full swing ... We as
civilians have started preparing the caves," he said, showing glass
bottles of pickled vegetables shelved on the damp cave walls.
Around 3 million people live in the rebel stronghold in northwest Syria,
which comprises most of Idlib province and adjacent small parts of
Latakia, Hama and Aleppo provinces.
About half of them fled fighting or were transferred there by the
government under surrender deals from other parts of Syria as Assad has
steadily taken back territory from rebels.
In April last year, a government warplane dropped sarin on Khan
Sheikhoun in Idlib, killing more than 80 civilians, the U.N. Commission
of Inquiry has said. It also said Syrian forces have used chemical
weapons, including chlorine, more than two dozen times during the war.
Damascus and its ally Russia both deny these charges and say they do not
engage in chemical warfare. Idlib residents are fearful and Washington
has warned Assad against using chemical weapons in any offensive,
promising a response if he does so.
PROTECTION
Russia, Assad's ally, resumed air strikes against insurgents in Idlib on
Tuesday following weeks of bombardment and shelling by pro-Syrian
government forces in an apparent prelude to a full-scale offensive
against the last major rebel enclave.
But Turkey has said it hopes a summit with Iranian and Russian leaders
in Tehran on Friday will avert an offensive.
[to top of second column]
|
Hudhayfa al-Shahad tries an improvised gas mask in Idlib, Syria
September 3, 2018. Picture taken September 3, 2018. REUTERS/Khalil
Ashawi
And some people Reuters spoke to in Idlib suspected an offensive may
be avoided.
"I do not believe there will be an attack on Idlib. It's all a media
war," said 50-year-old former construction worker Jaafar Abu Ahmad
from a rural area near Ma'arat al-Nuaman town. "The great world
powers have pre-agreed on us and divided the land."
Nevertheless, seven years of grinding war have taught Ahmad to be
prepared. His family is currently expanding a damp dugout they have
been digging and sheltering in from strikes for the past five years,
stocking it with food.
"We have been digging in the earth for two months non-stop, me, my
wife and children," he said. "This cave is now our protection. We
cleaned it recently after it had been neglected for a long time."
With shelling, air strikes and rhetoric about an impending offensive
increasing, a number of local councils across Idlib have come
together and asked Turkey for protection.
"For us in the liberated areas our only guarantor in negotiations is
our Turkish brothers," said Ahmad Shtaam al-Rashu, the 48-year-old
head of Ma'shureen village's local council.
Turkey has erected observation posts along the frontlines between
rebels and government forces, and Rashu said Turkey had told them
this was a sign of its commitment to protect the people of Idlib.
Idlib is often described as the "last refuge" for rebels and
internally displaced civilians, and any offensive threatens new
displacement and human misery.
"As for escaping toward the (Turkish) border, I don't believe we
will move from our houses. The bombardment will get us. There is no
place left after Idlib," said Ahmed al-Shahad.
"We will fight to the last man, we no longer have any option."
(Reporting by Khalil Ashawi in Syria; Writing by Lisa Barrington in
Beirut; Editing by Gareth Jones)
[© 2018 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2018 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |