Fleeing Aleppo fighting, Syrians describe terrifying choices
(Reuters) As Syrian government forces advanced into Aleppo’s rebel-held al-Sakhour district, Hasan al-Ali said he faced the choice of staying put and being caught by the army, or fleeing into a shrinking rebel enclave under relentless bombardment.
A father of three children, he opted for the latter, though food, fuel, water and medicine are running critically low in rebel-held areas, such is his fear of the Syrian government that insurgents have been trying to unseat for more than five years.
“I didn’t take anything with me. I took the kids, ran to my car, and left… We took the decision at the final hour, because the army could have swooped in at any moment,” the 33-year-old said, speaking in eastern Aleppo.
For Ali and thousands of others in the areas that fell to the army in recent days, the danger and deprivation of east Aleppo seem a safer bet than the imprisonment or enlistment into the military that they fear if they moved to government areas.
But as some fled deeper into Aleppo’s remaining rebel districts, others decided instead to risk a perilous crossing of the front lines into government-held parts of the city, seeing it as a safer option than staying with the outgunned rebels.
“I hope Syria will return to the way it was, and people get back security and peace like before,” said Abed al-Salam Ahmad, who crossed to the government sector with his wife and six daughters after their house was hit by a shell.
The former construction worker said conditions were so bad that even animals would not endure them, and that inhabitants were badly treated by east Aleppo’s rebels – something the rebels deny. His family fled at dawn, braving gunfire as they crossed the front line.
He spoke to Reuters TV at a disused cotton factory in Aleppo’s Jibreen area, one of two former industrial facilities opened by the government to receive the displaced.
The divergent paths chosen by Ali and Ahmad illustrate the terrifying choices that have faced civilians fleeing one of the most ferocious battles of the Syrian war, with President Bashar al-Assad poised for his biggest triumph of the conflict so far.
Both the rebels and the government have accused each other of manipulating Aleppo residents’ fears to their own advantage.
The military say rebels spread false reports of government abuses to deter people from leaving rebel areas. Rebels in turn say that people who speak of mistreatment by insurgents after fleeing their territory are acting out of fear of authorities.
STARVATION
Since the army swept through the northern part of the rebel enclave a week ago, capturing several large, populous districts, at least 30,000 people have fled across the front lines from the rebel areas, the U.N.’s relief coordinator OCHA said.
Thousands of others – the numbers are more difficult to calculate because international bodies are not present in rebel-held east Aleppo – retreated further into the insurgents’ sector, including to the dense quarters of the Old City. OCHA estimates 5,000 had been displaced within eastern Aleppo.
The U.N. envoy for Syria said on Saturday there may still be more than 100,000 people in rebel-held areas. The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said it could be as many as 200,000.
For those remaining in districts held by rebels, conditions are worsening, aggravated by the shortage of basic goods and the constant danger of bombardment in civilian areas and fighting near the quickly shifting front lines.
“We had a lot of starvation. They were giving us every day or two days a bag of bread, so five loaves of pitta bread,” said a woman who gave the name of Um Ali, or ‘Ali’s mother’, who had fled to the government sector from her home in Jeb al-Qubba district.
After the army has finished checking the identity papers of her and her family, she hopes they can move in with her brother in a western district of Aleppo that is in government hands.
Many of those who chose to remain in rebel areas believe that checks of identity papers are a prelude to mass arrests, torture and extrajudicial killing, citing previous media reports of such action – all dismissed by Damascus as fabricated.
The Observatory said on Wednesday the government had detained hundreds of people. A Syrian military source denied that, and said that while identities were being checked, nobody was being arrested.
Khalil Halabi, 35, a pharmacist from al-Shaar district near the new front line, moved with his wife and children to the rebel-held Old City after what he described as 11 days of escalating bombardment.
“The destruction is indescribable – the limbs, burnt limbs. Buildings collapsed and were burned down, mosques were destroyed completely,” he said.
“We lost a lot of people… through barrel bombs and rockets. Some of them died and some of them were permanently injured,” he said. Others from his district fled in the other direction, seeking shelter in government areas.
ESCAPE
For the people Reuters spoke to in Aleppo, the decision to leave home, even in the face of such deprivation and after a war that began in Syria in 2011 and arrived in their city in 2012, came as a wrench.
Mahmoud Zakaria Rannan, a tailor from the city’s Sheikh Najjar neighborhood who has six children and owned a small shop, said his family finally decided to leave after he was wounded when their house was shelled.
“I had been in my home for 40 years, was I going to leave it in one day?” he said. The family went to the Sheikh Khudr district and then to the Old City. But as clashes continued, they decided to join his brother in government-held Adamiya.
“We have kids, and I’m injured… so we had to walk very slowly,” he said. His journey included a two-hour trek through the city starting at 4 am. “There was a big group with us. They even fired on us at the airport highway.”
Some of those trapped inside the rebel sector may still be hoping to escape through a deal between rebels and the government, such as those that allowed thousands to leave Daraya near Damascus for insurgent-held Idlib after years of siege.
“I will go to another area, I’ll take my family and seek refuge in another area, a liberated area that doesn’t have the regime. I have no trust at all in the regime to stay in its areas,” said Ali.
WP QUADS Content Ad Plugin v. 1.3.6
(Reuters) As Syrian government forces advanced into Aleppo’s rebel-held al-Sakhour district, Hasan al-Ali said he faced the choice of staying put and being caught by the army, or fleeing into a shrinking rebel enclave under relentless bombardment.
A father of three children, he opted for the latter, though food, fuel, water and medicine are running critically low in rebel-held areas, such is his fear of the Syrian government that insurgents have been trying to unseat for more than five years.
“I didn’t take anything with me. I took the kids, ran to my car, and left… We took the decision at the final hour, because the army could have swooped in at any moment,” the 33-year-old said, speaking in eastern Aleppo.
For Ali and thousands of others in the areas that fell to the army in recent days, the danger and deprivation of east Aleppo seem a safer bet than the imprisonment or enlistment into the military that they fear if they moved to government areas.
But as some fled deeper into Aleppo’s remaining rebel districts, others decided instead to risk a perilous crossing of the front lines into government-held parts of the city, seeing it as a safer option than staying with the outgunned rebels.
“I hope Syria will return to the way it was, and people get back security and peace like before,” said Abed al-Salam Ahmad, who crossed to the government sector with his wife and six daughters after their house was hit by a shell.
The former construction worker said conditions were so bad that even animals would not endure them, and that inhabitants were badly treated by east Aleppo’s rebels – something the rebels deny. His family fled at dawn, braving gunfire as they crossed the front line.
He spoke to Reuters TV at a disused cotton factory in Aleppo’s Jibreen area, one of two former industrial facilities opened by the government to receive the displaced.
The divergent paths chosen by Ali and Ahmad illustrate the terrifying choices that have faced civilians fleeing one of the most ferocious battles of the Syrian war, with President Bashar al-Assad poised for his biggest triumph of the conflict so far.
Both the rebels and the government have accused each other of manipulating Aleppo residents’ fears to their own advantage.
The military say rebels spread false reports of government abuses to deter people from leaving rebel areas. Rebels in turn say that people who speak of mistreatment by insurgents after fleeing their territory are acting out of fear of authorities.
STARVATION
Since the army swept through the northern part of the rebel enclave a week ago, capturing several large, populous districts, at least 30,000 people have fled across the front lines from the rebel areas, the U.N.’s relief coordinator OCHA said.
Thousands of others – the numbers are more difficult to calculate because international bodies are not present in rebel-held east Aleppo – retreated further into the insurgents’ sector, including to the dense quarters of the Old City. OCHA estimates 5,000 had been displaced within eastern Aleppo.
The U.N. envoy for Syria said on Saturday there may still be more than 100,000 people in rebel-held areas. The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said it could be as many as 200,000.
For those remaining in districts held by rebels, conditions are worsening, aggravated by the shortage of basic goods and the constant danger of bombardment in civilian areas and fighting near the quickly shifting front lines.
“We had a lot of starvation. They were giving us every day or two days a bag of bread, so five loaves of pitta bread,” said a woman who gave the name of Um Ali, or ‘Ali’s mother’, who had fled to the government sector from her home in Jeb al-Qubba district.
After the army has finished checking the identity papers of her and her family, she hopes they can move in with her brother in a western district of Aleppo that is in government hands.
Many of those who chose to remain in rebel areas believe that checks of identity papers are a prelude to mass arrests, torture and extrajudicial killing, citing previous media reports of such action – all dismissed by Damascus as fabricated.
The Observatory said on Wednesday the government had detained hundreds of people. A Syrian military source denied that, and said that while identities were being checked, nobody was being arrested.
Khalil Halabi, 35, a pharmacist from al-Shaar district near the new front line, moved with his wife and children to the rebel-held Old City after what he described as 11 days of escalating bombardment.
“The destruction is indescribable – the limbs, burnt limbs. Buildings collapsed and were burned down, mosques were destroyed completely,” he said.
“We lost a lot of people… through barrel bombs and rockets. Some of them died and some of them were permanently injured,” he said. Others from his district fled in the other direction, seeking shelter in government areas.
ESCAPE
For the people Reuters spoke to in Aleppo, the decision to leave home, even in the face of such deprivation and after a war that began in Syria in 2011 and arrived in their city in 2012, came as a wrench.
Mahmoud Zakaria Rannan, a tailor from the city’s Sheikh Najjar neighborhood who has six children and owned a small shop, said his family finally decided to leave after he was wounded when their house was shelled.
“I had been in my home for 40 years, was I going to leave it in one day?” he said. The family went to the Sheikh Khudr district and then to the Old City. But as clashes continued, they decided to join his brother in government-held Adamiya.
“We have kids, and I’m injured… so we had to walk very slowly,” he said. His journey included a two-hour trek through the city starting at 4 am. “There was a big group with us. They even fired on us at the airport highway.”
Some of those trapped inside the rebel sector may still be hoping to escape through a deal between rebels and the government, such as those that allowed thousands to leave Daraya near Damascus for insurgent-held Idlib after years of siege.
“I will go to another area, I’ll take my family and seek refuge in another area, a liberated area that doesn’t have the regime. I have no trust at all in the regime to stay in its areas,” said Ali.
WP QUADS Content Ad Plugin v. 1.3.6
» Identifying the parties behind the rise in the exchange rate in the parallel market
» Al-Sudani to the heads of American companies: Iraq is prepared to attract all types of investments
» Al-Sudani: We are preparing a draft of the economic reform law and concluding a trade and investment
» Hussein: We discussed with Washington linking the market and the dinar to the dollar... and it revea
» Al-Sudani calls on Malaysia to contribute to development... and his counterpart invites him to visit
» Parliamentarians: There is almost an agreement between representatives, especially bloc leaders, to
» Al-Muttalabi: Al-Kadhimi moves between countries, and the Iraqi judiciary issued a recruitment warra
» Revealing the volume of trade exchange at the Al-Qaim border crossing with Syria
» Parliamentary Finance: The issue of increasing the salaries of retirees depends on this point
» Al-Sudani: The wrong path in wasting burned gas will stop within 2-3 years
» The overthrow of two high-ranking government impersonators
» Parliamentarian: The interest of Kurdistan requires him to deal positively with Baghdad
» To zero in on crises...a political vision on the importance of knowing the numbers of Kurdistan empl
» Al-Sudani: Within two years, we will depend on Iraqi gas to operate power stations
» Al-Sudani talks about the importance of restoring the relationship between Iran and America
» Parliament sets 3 months to restore the dollar exchange rate to its official rate
» Al-Abadi: This is why I joined the third blocking against Muqtada al-Sadr's project
» Al-Khazali discusses with the Russian Ambassador the maintenance of military equipment in the Minist
» His popularity is rising and the return is a “mortgage” decision.. Will Al-Sadr “take revenge” or re
» Erbil's "arrogance" strikes the Kurdish citizen, and the secession referendum "weakens the region"
» The highlights of the press interview conducted by Prime Minister Muhammad Shiaa Al-Sudani, in New Y
» Minister of Labor: Nearly 800 million dollars a month are given to foreign workers in Iraq
» Al-Sudani holds a meeting with the American Chamber of Commerce in New York
» The launch of the 32nd session of the Executive Committee of the Arab Parliamentary Union in Baghdad
» Iraq faces drought by digging hundreds of wells: drinking water is a priority
» Barzani agrees with the international coalition that those liberated from ISIS must be rehabilitated
» Integrity: Six years imprisonment for impersonating work in the Authority
» Oil confirms the obligation of foreign companies to adopt Iraqi workers at a rate of more than 85%
» The arrest of someone impersonating the relatives of the Prime Minister and the Secretary-General of
» Al-Abadi comments on Kirkuk and reveals the reasons for the increase in dollar prices
» Al-Sudani: The relationship between Iraq and America cannot remain limited to the security aspect
» The Iranian President expresses his position on the security agreement with Iraq
» Al-Sudani sends messages to Turkey, Iran and the Russian tourist and calls an existential danger t
» Iraq is studying a draft regulation for smart applications
» Vice: Traders’ refusal to enter the platform caused the dollar crisis
» An economist explains the reasons for delaying the implementation of the general budget
» Minister of Labor: Mafia in the Ministry blackmails beneficiaries in exchange for speeding up the re
» Al-Sudani: The meeting is being arranged with Biden, and we will call for the formation of an intern
» In the document: administrative changes in Rafidain Bank that contradict the decision of the Ministe
» The Sudanese government agrees with an Israeli international financing institution to rehabilitate B
» The Gulf Cooperation Council abandons cooperation and supports Kuwait at the expense of Iraq
» Observers: The rise of the dollar will not stop, and most travelers resort to the parallel market
» Experts: Hard currency speculation and smuggling threaten the value of the Iraqi dinar
» Al-Sudani: We are awaiting the actions of the Turkish side to resume exports through Kurdistan
» The US House of Representatives will hold a session next week to cancel the authorization for the in
» The Service Council extends the period for updating and confirming the data of certificate holders a
» Israeli-American protest about Tsurkov: The Iraqi government must feel responsible
» Minister of Water Resources: The marshes need approximately 6 billion cubic meters of water as a min
» Disclosure of an expected increase of 100 thousand dinars for the salaries of this category
» Al-Sudani: Within two years, we will depend on Iraqi gas to operate power stations
» A deputy reveals the imminent decline in the price of the dollar after the Washington meetings
» What is the relationship between the agreement between Baghdad and the region?.. Elekti accuses Turk
» Jordan holds Iraq responsible for postponing the electrical connection and determines who is disrupt
» “When is the payment due?”.. A new comment regarding visiting the salaries of a group of retirees
» The Iraqi Chambers of Commerce and the Japanese JICA discuss developing the private sector
» Al-Abadi: The success of the current government does not depend on pleasing America
» 9/19/23 Militia Man & Crew Iraq Dinar - Militia Man & Angel1 - Update on Iraq's Progress - Al-Suda
» 9/21/23 Militia Man & Crew IRAQ DINAR - Global Financial System - Liquidity = INTERNATIONAL EXCHA
» Parliamentary integrity aims at the governor of the Central Bank: his management is bad and his mand
» Parliamentary Services: The government is continuing to complete the New Sadr City project
» Minister of Oil: We give exceptional attention to the development of national companies and the nati
» The Prime Minister's advisor explains the spending priorities in the budget
» Parliamentary hosting of the Chairman of the Retirement Authority regarding overcoming obstacles and
» Sheikh Al-Karbalai: We seek to return Iraq to what it was before in a number of sectors, including h
» The representative of the Emir of Kuwait meets Al-Sudani: The Iraqi judiciary committed a historical
» Al-Sudani: We will direct quantities of oil to operate Iraqi refineries abroad
» Al-Sudani confirms Iraq's commitment to Security Council resolutions related to Iraq and Kuwait
» Washington played a role in the salary agreement between Baghdad and Erbil
» Foreign Minister: Iraq opened the doors of the economy to Gulf investment, and there are clear misun
» Planning discloses the details of the Baghdad-Babylon road project.
» Al-Sultani reveals violations of the number of employees in Kurdistan
» Including Iraq.. These countries dominate gold reserves in the Arab world
» A "golden opportunity" for companies.. The activities of the Erbil International Food Products Exhib
» Oil: Exporting surplus quantities of liquid gas abroad
» Seminar in Tehran on sustainable trade with Iraq
» Al-Maliki to the British Ambassador: Iraq is preparing to hold local elections that will contribute
» Al-Sudani invites the Secretary of NATO to Baghdad.. The benefits of the relationship outweigh the c
» The former Minister of Resources responds to Al-Halbousi: Iraq does not need new dams because the cu
» Sudanese to his Kuwaiti counterpart: Iraq is committed to Security Council resolutions and the sover
» Al-Sudani confirms Iraq's efforts to pursue strategic relations with the United States
» The Foreign Minister reveals the date of Al-Sudani’s visit to the White House: I will meet Lavrov so
» Kurdish MP: The reactions of Baghdad and Erbil to the Turkish bombing do not rise to the level of de
» Politician: Al-Sudani focuses on 3 points during his stay in New York
» Foreign Ministry: Our relations with Russia remain strong despite the sanctions
» Parliamentary Finance reveals three determinants for passing the salary scale
» Returning more than five thousand dismissed politicians to service
» Parliamentary services: 5 new cities will be added during 2024
» Integrity announces the value of the funds saved last August
» Parliamentary Legal: Passing a general amnesty depends on political consensus
» Mosul Dam Administration: We did not notice any technical problem threatening its safety
» The United States confirms its support for the success of the Sudanese government’s “reform” steps.
» The dollar continues to rise against the dinar in Baghdad and Erbil
» The President of the Kurdistan Region congratulates the Union of Islamic Religious Scholars on the a
» A Kuwaiti parliamentarian demands the return of his country’s deposits with Iraq: amounting to $815
» Iraqi Central Auction: External remittances increased by 80% at the expense of cash sales
» The central bank sells more than $198 million in currency auction
» Planning: 84% completion of the Baghdad-Kirkuk entrance rehabilitation and maintenance project.
» Kuwait: $815 million total deposits of the Kuwaiti government with Iraq