All
E. Ghouta towns liberated, key Damascus highway open after 7yrs of
blockade – Syrian military
RT,
31
March, 2018
Syrian
forces have liberated all militant-held settlements in the Damascus
suburb of Eastern Ghouta, the military command said in a televised
statement. A major Syrian motorway has been unblocked for the first
time in seven years.
“After
a set of carefully planned battles and operations carried out by our
armed forces in cooperation with loyal and allied troops, the control
over all the towns and settlements in the Damascus suburb of Eastern
Ghouta has been restored,” a
Syrian Army statement said, as cited by Sputnik news agency.
The
army has also lifted the blockade of a main highway connecting the
Syrian capital to the rest of the country, the statement said, as
cited by SANA state news agency. “The
victory in Eastern Ghouta ensured opening of the main routes between
Damascus and central, northern and coastal regions, and all the way
to the Iraqi border,” it
said.
Syrian
forces managed to defeat the militant groups holding Ghouta after
their headquarters, ammunition depots, fortifications and weapons
factories were destroyed, the army said. It added the military units
are continuing the offensive on the outskirts of the town of Douma,
driving militants out of the area.
The
milestone victory would ensure the “restoration
of security and stability in Damascus,” and
would bring relief to a civilian population that has suffered
from “terrorist
crimes and sponsors of terrorist organizations over the past several
years.”
The
Eastern Ghouta area has been under siege since 2012. In February this
year, Syrian troops began their offensive to liberate the last
militant-held stronghold located close to Damascus.
On
February 27, Russia brokered the humanitarian ceasefire in eastern
Ghouta to allow civilians to escape the area through a humanitarian
corridor, several of which have since been set up. The cessation of
hostilities was renewed several times, allowing civilians, as well as
militants and their families, to safely exit the besieged area.
The
Russian military also helped the Syrian Army ensure security in and
around humanitarian corridors, through which both civilians and
militants were exiting. The troops thwarted
dozens of suicide attacks targeting
buses that ferried civilians out of the area, Russian Defense
Minister Sergey Shoigu said on Friday. Forty-eight explosive belts
were also seized during anti-terrorism raids.
The
efforts enabled at least 150,000 people to leave eastern Ghouta for
safety, the majority of them being Syrian civilians suffering under
the militant rule. As the area was being liberated, some 40,000
people returned to their homes. Those who have returned are receiving
aid packages delivered by UN agencies and the Russian Reconciliation
Centre.
Syrian
civilians who managed to flee eastern Ghouta through humanitarian
corridors relayed the stories of atrocities committed by the
terrorists. They told RT’s video agency Ruptly that the militants
kept all the food and water for themselves, used people as human
shields and employed threats and violence in order to prevent them
from leaving the war-torn area.
Life in eastern Ghouta will soon be returning back to normal in a way that is similar to what is now happening in Aleppo, which was liberated from militants with Russia’s help in late 2016, Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said, reacting to the news.
“We
have a place, which was one of the last terrorist strongholds,
cleared from militants… We have obvious progress, which is admitted
by the UN and humanitarian organizations; we have the process of
withdrawal of civilians [from terrorist-held areas] and the
liberation of towns,” Zakharova
told Russia’s Channel 5.
Those
are the signs that “bit
by bit, eastern Ghouta will follow the footsteps of Aleppo, where
from 100,000 to 200,000 people have already returned,” she
said. “It
still less than what used to be the city's population [before the
war], but it shows that life is really starting to come back to
normal.”
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