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Aleppo Evacuation Halted Amid Confusion and Concerns About Killings | |
(about 4 hours later) | |
BEIRUT, Lebanon — The evacuation of residents from the last rebel-held section in the devastated Syrian city of Aleppo broke down on Friday with thousands of people still trapped inside, as concern escalated about their fate. | |
The breakdown — a day after Syrian government buses and ambulances had begun taking them out — came amid multiple accounts that a convoy of 1,000 evacuees had been stopped by pro-government militiamen, who shot several passengers, execution style, before sending the rest back. | |
The government’s recapture of Aleppo, once the country’s commercial center, after a prolonged siege by Syrian forces aided by their Russian allies has been exalted by President Bashar al-Assad of Syria as a turning point in the nearly six-year-old war. But the images of death, suffering and destruction from the siege have shocked the world. | |
“The carnage in Syria remains a gaping hole in the global conscience,” Ban Ki-moon, the United Nations secretary general, told reporters at an end-of-year news conference. “Aleppo is now a synonym for hell.” | |
The reported summary killings on the convoy were conveyed via telephone by two civilian witnesses and two rebel leaders, and they could not immediately be corroborated further. | |
Zaher al-Zaher, an antigovernment activist on the convoy, said militiamen at a checkpoint with yellow flags stopped the convoy, forced Red Cross and Red Crescent escorts to leave, and began taking cellphones and laptops from the evacuees. One unarmed passenger accosted them for talking impolitely to his pregnant wife, Mr. Zaher said in a telephone interview, “so they shot him on the spot,” along with two others. | |
Zouhair al-Shimale, another activist reached briefly by phone, said that he was on the convoy when militiamen stopped it, handcuffed the men and shot four, telling them, “It’s payback.” | |
The precise reasons for halting the evacuation after more than 8,000 people, mostly civilians but also some insurgent fighters, had been taken to safety was not immediately clear. | |
Nor was it known whether the operation had been suspended temporarily. | |
Syrian state news media accused the rebels of seeking to smuggle weapons out of the area and of firing on the convoys of evacuees, while antigovernment activists said pro-government militias had blocked the passage to protest the continued siege of two Shiite villages by rebels. | |
Russia appeared to have compounded the confusion by issuing statements declaring — incorrectly — that the evacuation of civilians and fighters from the rebel enclave had been “completed”; that “all women and children” had been bused out, leaving only “irreconcilable and radical” armed fighters; and that Syrian government forces were “liquidating the radicals’ remaining points of resistance.” | |
The World Health Organization said that staff members had been asked to leave the area where residents of eastern Aleppo had gathered to be evacuated, but that it did not know why the process had been halted. | |
“No reason was given,” Elizabeth Hoff, the World Health Organization’s representative in Syria, told journalists in Geneva, speaking by telephone from the United Nations base in west Aleppo. | “No reason was given,” Elizabeth Hoff, the World Health Organization’s representative in Syria, told journalists in Geneva, speaking by telephone from the United Nations base in west Aleppo. |
“A very high number” of civilians still need to get out of eastern Aleppo, including many women and children under 5, Ms. Hoff said. It is unclear how many people remain in the rebel enclave, but most estimates put the figure at 50,000 to 100,000. | |
Many people had gathered at evacuation points Friday morning, only to return to their neighborhoods when the operation stopped. | Many people had gathered at evacuation points Friday morning, only to return to their neighborhoods when the operation stopped. |
Ms. Hoff said she assumed the decision came from officials in Russia, whose military is overseeing the evacuation. The United Nations had no contact with Syrian officials throughout the operation on Thursday. | Ms. Hoff said she assumed the decision came from officials in Russia, whose military is overseeing the evacuation. The United Nations had no contact with Syrian officials throughout the operation on Thursday. |
Hospitals in western Aleppo were “overwhelmed” by residents of nearby government-held areas, as well as by people from the east who were wounded in the conflict or needed treatment for chronic diseases, she said. | |
The evacuations, brokered by Turkey and Russia and carried out by the Syrian Arab Red Crescent and the Red Cross, began Thursday morning after violence in the city caused delays. The evacuations continued overnight, providing hope that the cease-fire between the government and rebel forces in the city would hold. | |
Before Friday’s suspension, more than 8,000 people had been removed from the rebel enclave, according to the state news media and the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which opposes the Syrian government and tracks the conflict from Britain. | Before Friday’s suspension, more than 8,000 people had been removed from the rebel enclave, according to the state news media and the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which opposes the Syrian government and tracks the conflict from Britain. |
The group attributed the suspension to the failure of a separate operation to evacuate civilians from two Shiite villages in nearby Idlib Province, Fua and Kfraya, that have long been surrounded by rebel forces. | |
While buses had departed on Thursday for the villages, no residents had left by Friday morning, leading gunmen from pro-government militias to block the road out of the rebel enclave in Aleppo. | |
Robert Mardini, the Middle East director for the International Committee of the Red Cross, confirmed the suspension but did not provide the reason. | Robert Mardini, the Middle East director for the International Committee of the Red Cross, confirmed the suspension but did not provide the reason. |
The two Shiite villages, which have been surrounded for years by Sunni rebels forces that often shell them, were not originally part of the evacuation deal. They were added after pro-government gunmen fired on the evacuation convoys on Wednesday. | The two Shiite villages, which have been surrounded for years by Sunni rebels forces that often shell them, were not originally part of the evacuation deal. They were added after pro-government gunmen fired on the evacuation convoys on Wednesday. |
The evacuation deal followed a long siege of the rebel-held area by Syrian government forces and their allies, during which shelling and airstrikes by Russian and Syrian jets killed hundreds of people and reduced much of the area to rubble. Rebels also shelled government-held areas of the city, killing and wounding civilians. | The evacuation deal followed a long siege of the rebel-held area by Syrian government forces and their allies, during which shelling and airstrikes by Russian and Syrian jets killed hundreds of people and reduced much of the area to rubble. Rebels also shelled government-held areas of the city, killing and wounding civilians. |
Mr. Assad, speaking in a video released by his office on Thursday, described the evacuation as “history that is being written,” comparing it with historic events like the birth of Christ and the world wars. | |
Secretary of State John Kerry denounced the Syrian government in harsh terms. “The Assad regime is actually carrying out nothing short of a massacre,” he told reporters in Washington on Thursday. | Secretary of State John Kerry denounced the Syrian government in harsh terms. “The Assad regime is actually carrying out nothing short of a massacre,” he told reporters in Washington on Thursday. |
Under the terms of the deal, civilian evacuees can stay in government-held areas or can go to rebel-held areas to the north or west. Evacuated fighters can go only to rebel areas. | Under the terms of the deal, civilian evacuees can stay in government-held areas or can go to rebel-held areas to the north or west. Evacuated fighters can go only to rebel areas. |
Turkey says it is planning to set up camps for the displaced in northern Syria, near their border. | Turkey says it is planning to set up camps for the displaced in northern Syria, near their border. |
President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia said on Friday that he was working with Turkey to begin a new round of talks in Kazakhstan’s capital, Astana, aimed at ending the war. | |
Previous peace talks, overseen by the United Nations and held in Geneva, have failed to end the war, which has killed more than 500,000 people and displaced about half of Syria’s population. | Previous peace talks, overseen by the United Nations and held in Geneva, have failed to end the war, which has killed more than 500,000 people and displaced about half of Syria’s population. |
The crisis in eastern Aleppo has divided world opinion. Many Western countries, Turkey and Persian Gulf states have backed the rebels, criticizing the Syrian government and its allies for their prosecution of the war. | The crisis in eastern Aleppo has divided world opinion. Many Western countries, Turkey and Persian Gulf states have backed the rebels, criticizing the Syrian government and its allies for their prosecution of the war. |
For their part, Syria, Russia and Iran have characterized the rebels as “terrorists” serving foreign agendas and seeking to destroy the country. A report on Friday from the Syrian state news agency, Sana, said that more than 8,000 “terrorists and their families” had been evacuated from Aleppo. | For their part, Syria, Russia and Iran have characterized the rebels as “terrorists” serving foreign agendas and seeking to destroy the country. A report on Friday from the Syrian state news agency, Sana, said that more than 8,000 “terrorists and their families” had been evacuated from Aleppo. |
The United Nations and the Red Cross say that most of those leaving are civilians. | The United Nations and the Red Cross say that most of those leaving are civilians. |