Aid groups yesterday launched their largest aid delivery yet in war-torn Syria after the UN evacuated hundreds of besieged residents, intensifying relief efforts even as peace talks falter.
The two major operations were a rare sign of humanitarian progress in Syria, where the brutal five-year war has left 270,000 dead as a partial ceasefire hangs by a thread.
The dire humanitarian situation had even stalled UN-backed peace talks in Geneva, with the opposition walking away in frustration at sieges and attacks on civilians.
UN envoy Staffan de Mistura told reporters gathered in Geneva that yesterday’s developments showed “modest but real progress”.
“If humanitarian aid increases, as there should be, and the cessation of hostilities goes back into what we consider a hopeful mood, that would certainly help the political discussions,” he said.
Aid groups yesterday began delivering medical and food aid to 120,000 people in and near the besieged rebel-held town of Rastan.
Pawel Krzysiek, spokesman for the International Committee of the Red Cross, said it was “the largest joint humanitarian convoy we have done in Syria so far”.
He said ICRC and Syrian Arab Red Crescent teams were assessing the water and waste infrastructure, as well as the nutritional needs of residents.
“What’s most striking are the vast farming lands, unused because of insecurity,” he told AFP, who was travelling with the convoy.
The last ICRC delivery was in 2012, the same year rebels seized the town in central Homs province.
Both rebels and regime have used besiegement as a weapon of war in Syria, and more than 4mn people live under siege or in hard-to-reach areas.
The UN yesterday completed a major evacuation of hundreds “in urgent need of life-saving medical attention” and their families, from four other besieged towns, two held by the government and two by rebels.
The carefully synchronised operation began late on Wednesday and lasted throughout the night. It saw 250 evacuees brought out of the besieged rebel-held towns of Madaya and Zabadani near Damascus and then transported to Idlib city.
The same number left Fuaa and Kafraya, pro-government towns under siege by Islamist rebels, and travelled to the regime’s coastal bastion in Latakia.
Such operations can take weeks to organise, although rebels, regime forces and even militant groups have been ready to strike local deals to enable aid deliveries or large-scale evacuations.
Militant factions like the Islamic State group and Al Qaeda are not party to an increasingly strained truce between the government and non-militant rebels.
The “cessation of hostilities” came into force on February 27 and initially saw a significant reduction in bloodshed.
Although none of its signatories have officially declared the truce dead, violence has surged in recent weeks, particularly in Idlib province and the battleground northern city of Aleppo.
On Tuesday, suspected government strikes on the Idlib province towns of Maaret al-Numan and Kafranbel hit two markets, killing at least 44 civilians, according to the Observatory.
The strikes drew a furious reaction from the opposition High Negotiations Committee (HNC) which said they vindicated its decision to suspend its participation in the Geneva talks.
The Observatory reported new air strikes yesterday against rebel-held towns in Homs province in central Syria that are covered by the truce.
Some of the strikes involved barrel bombs, crude munitions infamous for their indiscriminate nature, the Britain-based watchdog said.
The UN, as well as Russia and the US - which brokered the truce - are desperate to see it hold long enough to secure a negotiated settlement of the five-year conflict.
But the walkout by the HNC has left a political solution increasingly distant, and has emboldened the government delegation to take a tougher line.
The HNC’s members are set to all leave Geneva by today, an opposition official told AFP.
Chief HNC negotiator Mohamed Alloush told journalists that the regime would have to “stop its massacres and release thousands of detainees so that it could have a shred of nationalism and humanity.”
“Then, the talks can start again,” said Alloush, also a leading member of the Jaish Al Islam rebel group, as he left his hotel in Switzerland.
The government’s chief representative in Geneva, Bashar al-Jaafari, said his delegation would continue with the UN-brokered indirect negotiations.
But he said only opposition members “who reject terrorism (and) who do not work for the sake of a foreign agenda” would be permitted to join a “broad-based unity government.”
That would appear to rule out the HNC, whom he described as a group of “extremists, terrorists and mercenaries” working for Saudi Arabia and Turkey, the opposition’s main backers.


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