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Syrians cower in basements as bombs pound enclave
By Hasan Mohammed with an AFP reporter in Damascus
Douma, Syria (AFP) Feb 21, 2018

Macron urges truce in Syria's East Ghouta
Paris (AFP) Feb 21, 2018 - French President Emmanuel Macron on Wednesday called for a truce in Syria's Eastern Ghouta to allow for the evacuation of civilians trapped by a barrage of airstrikes on the rebel-held enclave.

"France is asking for a truce in Eastern Ghouta in order to ensure the evacuation of civilians and facilitate humanitarian access as quickly as possible," he told reporters, accusing Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's regime of using the fight against terrorism as a "pretext" to attack civilians.

Macron said that France was "fully committed" to fighting Islamist terrorism in Syria as part of the US-led coalition.

"But France clearly, vigorously condemns what is happening today in Eastern Ghouta," he said, calling for an "immediate" UN resolution on the situation.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on Wednesday also called for an immediate halt in the fighting, saying Eastern Ghouta, home to around 400,000 civilians, had become "hell on Earth".

Russia, Iran must help end 'massacre' in Syria enclave: Berlin
Berlin (AFP) Feb 21, 2018 - Germany on Wednesday urged Russia and Iran to push the Syrian regime to end the deadly airstrikes on rebel-held Eastern Ghouta, noting that the two had pledged to be guarantors of peace in Syria.

"One has to ask where is Russia, where is Iran, which had pledged in Astana to guarantee a ceasefire also in Eastern Ghouta," said Steffen Seibert, spokesman for Chancellor Angela Merkel, referring to peace talks in the Kazakh capital.

"Without the support of these two allies, Assad's regime would not be where it is today, and undoubtedly, without this support, this regime would have to show more readiness to negotiate in the UN (peace) process," the German government spokesman added.

"We demand that the Assad regime immediately end the massacre in Ghouta and allow in humanitarian aid as well as medical evacuation. We also demand that the backers of the Assad regime use their strong influence to achieve this end," Seibert said.

The regime of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad stepped up its airstrikes this month on the rebel enclave east of Damascus, where close to 300 civilians have been killed since Sunday.

Warplanes continued to pound Eastern Ghouta towns on Wednesday, killing 24 civilians, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

For several days, residents of the Eastern Ghouta rebel enclave near Damascus have huddled, terrified, in basements and bomb shelters as regime air strikes pound their towns to rubble.

Just a few miles away, inhabitants of government-held capital Damascus, spared much of the devastation of Syria's seven-year war, stay off the streets for fear of retaliatory rebel bombardment.

Regime air strikes, rocket and artillery attacks have killed over 300 civilians including 70 children this week, leaving residents of besieged Eastern Ghouta fearing an imminent regime ground assault to crush rebel forces there.

"There is a real fear that the regime will enter," said Abu Mohammad Al-Afa, 39.

"We have no way out and no country will give us refuge. All we have now are these cellars."

He is one of dozens of people crowded into a single underground room.

"The fear is enormous, and the whole world is just watching us," Al-Afa said.

Once the breadbasket of Damascus, the region fell under rebel control in 2012 and has been trapped in a government siege for the past five years.

The enclave of some 400,000 inhabitants has suffered repeated rounds of regime bombardment, but this week's campaign has been among the most intense yet.

The Syrian regime and its Russian ally seem more determined than ever to smash the Islamist groups holding out there.

Residents fear an offensive similar to the battle of Aleppo in late 2016, during which several hundred civilians were killed and wounded as the regime ousted rebel groups.

- 'When will we die?' -

Amal al-Wuhaibi has taken refuge in a cemetery.

"Coming to the graveyard is like burying ourselves before we're dead," she said.

"What we're experiencing now is worse than regime forces coming in. It might be better if they come," she added.

"We're asking: when will we die?"

Despite the years of siege and violence, some in Eastern Ghouta are prepared to accept the regime's return, said Umm Mohammad, a teacher in the town of Douma who wore a black scarf and a hijab.

"Some people say 'I have no problem with the regime coming -- I just want my husband and my son to be safe, I want to live in safety'," she said.

But others want to fight to the bitter end, she said.

"They say: we've fought seven years to give up the land now? To hand over our children, adults, the elderly, for slaughter? No way!"

Since Sunday night, the regime has pounded the region with air strikes, artillery and missiles.

The streets of towns and villages are empty, apart from ruined buildings and scattered rubble, as stray animals run amongst the smoke rising from bomb sites.

United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on Wednesday called for an immediate halt in fighting in the enclave, saying it had become like "hell on earth" for civilians.

"We don't dare go outside," said Khadija, 53, hiding in a basement in the town of Douma.

Shivering as she gathered several children around her in the darkened room, she said: "There are planes above us and missiles landing around us: where should we go with our children?"

- Fear in Damascus -

A few kilometres away in Damascus, which has not experienced anything like the scale of the destruction in Eastern Ghouta, residents nevertheless live in fear.

Dozens of rockets fired by rebels slam into the capital every day.

On Tuesday, 13 civilians died in rebel fire, forcing many Damascenes to stay at home and several schools to close.

The Old City, thought by many to be the oldest continuously-inhabited places in the world, is one of the hardest-hit districts.

The street of Bab Touma, where cafes and restaurants are usually crowded, has been deserted for several days.

"We want the army to save us from this situation with any solution it deems appropriate," said resident Ibrahim as he examined damage caused by a rocket in the Bab Sharqi district.

"We are sick of the shells falling day and night," he added. "We don't dare send our children to school any more. Fear rules us."

As rumours spread that regime forces are amassing for an imminent regime offensive into Ghouta, several Damascus residents told AFP they were planning to leave temporarily.

Karim said he would head to his family home on the Syrian coast "until calm returns."


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WAR REPORT
Syria, Russia pound rebel enclave, put clinic out of service
Arbin, Syria (AFP) Feb 21, 2018
Syrian and Russian air strikes on the rebel-held Eastern Ghouta enclave have killed more than 100 civilians for the second straight day and put another hospital out of service. In a major development in Syria's complex seven-year war, Damascus also sent pro-regime fighters to the northern Afrin region, where they came under fire by Turkish forces attacking the Kurdish-controlled enclave. On the outskirts of Damascus, air strikes, rockets and artillery fire have been battering the Eastern Ghouta ... read more

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