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WAR REPORT
Pummeled civilians in Syria enclave await Russia's first daily truce
by Staff Writers
Douma, Syria (AFP) Feb 27, 2018

Putin orders daily 'humanitarian pause' in Eastern Ghouta
Moscow (AFP) Feb 26, 2018 - Russian President Vladimir Putin has ordered a daily "humanitarian pause" to air strikes on the rebel-held Syrian enclave of Eastern Ghouta from Tuesday, Moscow's defence minister said Monday.

"On the instructions of the Russian president, with the goal of avoiding civilian casualties in Eastern Ghouta, from February 27 -- tomorrow -- from 9.00 to 14.00 there will be a humanitarian pause," minister Sergei Shoigu said at a ministry meeting, according to a statement sent to AFP.

He said there should be similar pauses in the southern Al-Tanf border region and Rukban, near the Jordanian border, "so that civilians can return to their homes unhindered and begin to rebuild their civilian lives".

Russia has denied air strikes on the enclave have killed civilians and insisted groups attacked by regime and allied forces are associated with terrorists.

More than 520 civilians are thought to have died in a week of heavy bombardment in Eastern Ghouta, just outside Damascus, by Syria's regime.

The US, rights groups and Syrian media have said Russian planes carried out the strikes, including on hospitals.

The UN Security Council on Saturday unanimously demanded a 30-day truce in Syria.

Russia is a key ally of Assad, and fought a campaign for over two years in Syria in his support, helping to turn around the multi-front war.

The battered residents of Syria's Eastern Ghouta rebel enclave were waiting Tuesday morning for the start of a "humanitarian pause" announced by Russia after days of carnage wrought by artillery and air strikes.

More than 550 civilians, almost a quarter of them children, have been killed in the last week after Syrian government forces launched a renewed offensive on the rebel enclave in one of the worst episodes of bloodletting in Syria's seven-year-old conflict.

A UN Security Council resolution passed on Saturday calling for a 30-day truce has been a dead letter with Moscow, the Damascus regime's main backer, setting its own truce terms instead.

On Monday, after days of building international pressure, Russia said it would organise a daily five hour pause in the fighting to allow civilians to escape through "humanitarian corridors", the first of which is due to start at 9:00 am (0700 GMT) on Tuesday.

The public would be informed with leaflets and text messages, and buses and ambulances would be waiting at a crossing to evacuate the sick and wounded, Moscow said.

The short truce could be the first opportunity in days for Eastern Ghouta's brutalised residents to escape from their underground shelters after a relentless bombardment that has sparked growing international outrage.

"Five hours is better than no hours, but we would like to see an end to all hostilities extended by 30 days, as stipulated by the Security Council," UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric said.

Washington, which has backed Syrian rebel forces fighting Damascus, hit out at Moscow's partial truce Monday night.

"#Russia has the influence to stop these operations if it chooses to live up to its obligations under the #UNSC ceasefire," US State Department spokeswoman Heather Nauert tweeted.

"The United States calls for an immediate end to offensive operations and urgent access for humanitarian workers to treat the wounded and deliver badly needed humanitarian aid."

The rebel group Faylaq al-Rahman also criticised the initiative.

"Forcing civilians to leave or face death under bombardment and siege constitutes a Russian crime," its spokesman Wael Alwan said on Twitter.

- Bleeding to death -

Eastern Ghouta is a rebel stronghold on the edge of the capital Damascus which has been outside government control since 2012 and is thought to be home to some 400,000 civilians.

It is held by a mish-mash of rebel and jihadist factions.

Since the near total collapse of the Islamic State group's once sprawling "caliphate", Damascus has looked bent on completing its reconquest and Eastern Ghouta is a key target.

The regime intensified its air campaign there early this month with devastating results -- the United Nations estimates three quarters of private housing has been damaged.

Much of the population has moved underground, with families pitching tents in basements and venturing out only to assess damage to their property and buy food, a trip that frequently turns deadly amid the falling shells and bombs.

Residents trapped in the wreckage of their own homes have bled to death as even rescuers were targeted.

The intensity of the bombardment on Eastern Ghouta had eased somewhat in the past 48 hours but deadly strikes and shelling have not stopped.

At least 22 civilians, including seven children, were killed in new raids and artillery fire by the regime, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights war monitor said Monday.

On Sunday, a child died and 13 others suffered breathing difficulties and showed symptoms consistent with a chlorine attack after a regime air raid struck the town of Al-Shifuniyah, the Observatory and a medic said.

Russia dismissed reports of a chemical attack as "bogus stories."

The Syrian government has repeatedly denied using chemical weapons, a stance repeatedly supported by Moscow.

But UN investigators say government forces used chlorine as a weapon at least three times between 2014 and 2015 as well as a sarin gas attack in 2016.

In November Russia used its veto power twice to block the renewal of a UN investigative panel tasked with identifying those responsible for the deadly gas attacks.



Syria's Eastern Ghouta: more than a week under attack
Beirut (AFP) Feb 26, 2018 - Syria's army unleashed a new round of daily air strikes on Damascus's rebel-held Eastern Ghouta region on February 18, killing more than 550 civilians since then.

Its deadly campaign to root out Islamist rebels controlling the area, already hit hard by a five-year government siege, has provoked an international outcry and demands for a truce.

Here is a timeline:

- Rockets, intense raids -

On February 18, government forces fire more than 260 rockets and the air force carries out intense raids on several areas in Eastern Ghouta.

The following day, regime forces again pound the region, killing 127 civilians in the highest death toll over a single day in the rebel enclave since 2013.

"The humanitarian situation of civilians in East Ghouta is spiralling out of control," says the UN's regional humanitarian coordinator for Syria, Panos Moumtzis.

- 'Hell on Earth' -

On February 20, Russian air strikes target Eastern Ghouta for the first time in three months, reportedly hitting the key regional Arbin hospital and putting it out of service.

Six other hospitals are also hit in the bombardments over a 48-hour period, putting three out of service, according to the United Nations.

Hundreds of injured flock to makeshift hospitals where the beds run short and patients are treated on the floor.

On February 21, raids target several areas and planes drop barrel bombs -- crude, improvised munitions that cause indiscriminate damage.

Several residential buildings are destroyed, according to an AFP correspondent.

The Kremlin denies involvement in the air strikes as "groundless accusations".

UN chief Antonio Guterres calls for an immediate ceasefire, saying the region's 400,000 residents "live in hell on Earth".

- 'Another Aleppo' -

On February 22, the chaos deepens as the Syrian regime rains rockets and bombs on the enclave, killing at least 19 people.

After weeks of talks at the United Nations on a truce, Russian ambassador Vassily Nebenzi says there is no progress.

Russia has been pressing for a negotiated withdrawal of rebel fighters and their families, like the one that saw the government retake full control of Aleppo in December 2016.

"Yes, Eastern Ghouta will become another Aleppo," says Syria's representative to the UN, Bashar al-Jaafari.

Doctors Without Borders says 13 of the facilities it supports in Eastern Ghouta were damaged or destroyed in three days.

- Ceasefire agreed -

On February 23, the Islamist rebel groups controlling Eastern Ghouta -- Jaish al-Islam and Faylaq al-Rahman -- reject any Aleppo-style evacuation plan.

US President Donald Trump slams the actions of the Syrian government and its Russian and Iranian backers.

"What those three countries have done to those people is a disgrace," he says.

On February 24, the UN Security Council unanimously backs a 30-day ceasefire to allow for humanitarian aid deliveries and medical evacuations.

The resolution is backed by Russia.

But there are new air strikes the following day and the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitor reports that Syrian forces had engaged in heavy fighting with rebels, with many dead.

There are claims of the use of "chemical weapons, probably a chlorine gas attack", a doctor says, with a child dying and at least 13 other people suffering breathing difficulties.

Russia dismisses this as "bogus".

- Russia orders daily pause -

On February 26, the regime carries out fresh bombings, in spite of the UN-agreed truce, killing 22 civilians.

Frustrated, the UN and European Union demand the immediate implementation of the ceasefire.


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