Ambulances and buses evacuating people drive out of a rebel-held part of Aleppo on Thursday.—Reuters
ALEPPO: Hundreds of civilians and rebels left Aleppo on Thursday under an evacuation deal that would allow Syria’s regime to take full control of the city after years of fighting.
The rebel withdrawal began a month to the day after President Bashar al-Assad’s forces launched a new offensive to recapture Aleppo and would hand the regime its biggest victory in more than five years of civil war.
In a video message to Syrians, Assad said the “liberation” of Aleppo was “history in the making”.
A revived agreement on a ceasefire and the evacuations was announced on Thursday, after an initial plan for civilians and fighters to leave rebel-held parts of the city collapsed the previous day amid renewed clashes.
The evacuation began with a convoy of ambulances and buses crossing into a government-held district in southern Aleppo around 2:30pm.
A Syrian military source said that 951 evacuees, including 108 wounded, were in the convoy. Most were civilians but about 200 rebel fighters were among them, the source said.
The convoy arrived just over an hour later in opposition territory about five kilometres west of the city, a doctor at the scene said. “The wounded will be transferred to... nearby hospitals for treatment,” said Ahmad al-Dbis, who heads a unit of doctors and other volunteers coordinating the evacuation of wounded people.
The evacuees spent hours gathering earlier at a staging area in Aleppo’s southern Al-Amiriyah district. A correspondent there saw people piling onto the green buses, filling seats and even sitting on the floor, with some worried that there would not be another chance to evacuate.
Many were in tears and some hesitated to board, afraid they would end up in the hands of regime forces. On the dusty window of one of the buses someone had written, “One day we will return”.
Each bus carried a member of the Syrian Red Crescent dressed in the organisation’s red uniform, riding at the front next to the driver.
Ingy Sedky, the International Committee of the Red Cross’s spokeswoman in Syria, said the first convoy included 13 ambulances and 20 buses carrying civilians.
Once the first convoy arrived safely “it will return and collect more people for a second journey and continue like that. We will go today for as long as conditions allow,” she said.
Syrian state television reported that at least 4,000 rebels and their families would be evacuated under the plan. It said preparations were under way for a second convoy to leave rebel-held territory.
A first evacuation attempt on Wednesday morning fell apart, with artillery exchanges and resumed air strikes rocking the city until the early hours of Thursday.