Who's playing with fire?': Syria's Ghouta truce broken for 2nd day
Militants holed up in the eastern Ghouta suburb of Damascus opened fire on hundreds of civilians who were trying to flee the area via a humanitarian corridor, the Russian Center for Reconciliation in Syria said
Militants
holed up in the eastern Ghouta suburb of Damascus opened fire on
hundreds of civilians who were trying to flee the area via a
humanitarian corridor, the Russian Center for Reconciliation in Syria
said.
“Today,
the Jaysh al-Islam militants have dispersed more than 300 civilians
who wanted to pass [out of eastern Ghouta] through the humanitarian
corridor in the north-eastern outskirts of the city of Douma,”
Major General Yury Yevtushenko, the head of the Reconciliation
Center, said on Wednesday.
“The
people were fired upon,” he said, adding that there has not been
any information on the number of casualties among the civilians so
far. According to the Reconciliation Center, the militants are
denying the people exit from the combat zone for the second day in a
row, threatening anyone who attempts to flee with death.
Jaysh
al-Islam, which is the largest group operating in eastern Ghouta and
Douma, have used inmates from a local prison and civilians in order
to erect firing positions outside the humanitarian corridor,
Yevtushenko said.
According
to the Russian military, the terrorists fired 13 mortar shells at
residential areas of Damascus on Wednesday, causing injuries and
destruction. “Nine people, including three children, were wounded”
in the Syrian capital, Yevtushenko said.
The
actions of the terrorists operating in eastern Ghouta, which is a
current hotspot in the Syrian conflict, indicate their unwillingness
to follow resolutions and their desire to continue warfare, the head
of the Reconciliation Center said. On Saturday, the UN Security
Council unanimously adopted a resolution on a 30-day ceasefire in
Syria. However, it was ignored by Jaysh al-Islam and other groups in
eastern Ghouta, who continued shelling Damascus.
On
Wednesday, Vladimir Putin said that eastern Ghouta is being used by
numerous terrorist groups as a base to launch attacks on the Syrian
capital and other areas in the country. Dozens of rockets and mines
are being fired at Damascus from the area every day, with shells
landing “even on the territory of the Russian embassy and trade
mission."
"Are
we going to tolerate this forever?” the Russian president wondered.
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