Families slowly exit Syria's besieged Aleppo

First group of Syrian families begin leaving Syria's besieged Aleppo after Russia announced opening of ‘humanitarian corridor'.

Syrian regime forces have surrounded rebel-held districts in eastern Aleppo since July 17, sparking fears for an estimated 250,000 people who live there.
TRT World and Agencies

Syrian regime forces have surrounded rebel-held districts in eastern Aleppo since July 17, sparking fears for an estimated 250,000 people who live there.

Groups of civilians left the besieged and battered opposition-held east of Syria's Aleppo city on Saturday through a "humanitarian corridor" to the regime-held west, state media reported.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights also reported that "a number" of civilians had crossed into regime territory.

The crossings were the first major movement of people from the besieged districts of the city after regime ally Russia announced on Thursday that passages would be opened for civilians and surrendering fighters.

State television broadcast footage showing civilians, mostly women and children, walking under the watch of regime troops and boarding buses.

"This morning dozens of families left via the corridors identified," state news agency SANA reported. "They were welcomed by members of the army and taken by bus to temporary shelters," it added.

It said "a number" of women over the age of 40 had left in addition to the families and were taken to shelters.

SANA added "armed men from eastern neighbourhoods of Aleppo" turned themselves over to army soldiers in Salaheddin district, without specifying a number or giving further details.

State television broadcast footage of a handful of men entering regime territory carrying their weapons aloft, some with scarves wrapped around their faces.

‘Afraid to leave'

Once Syria's economic powerhouse, Aleppo has been ravaged by the war that began in March 2011.

It has been roughly divided between regime control in the west and rebel control in the east since mid-2012.

Eastern neighbourhoods have been under total siege since July 7, when regime forces seized the only remaining supply route.

The encirclement has caused food shortages and spiralling prices in the east, and raised fears of a humanitarian crisis for the estimated 250,000 people still living there.

But the humanitarian corridors announced by Russia have been met with suspicion by residents, as well as countries including the United States.

TRT World and Agencies

A view shows what is believed to be the road that civilians would have to use to access one of the safe exit points opened for civilians to leave rebel-held areas, in Aleppo's Bustan al Qasr, Syria July 29, 2016.

Many residents said they were afraid to leave.

"I want to leave, but not to government-held areas," said Abu Mohamed, a 50-year-old father of four living in Al Shaar district.

"I'm very afraid they will take my 17-year-old son and force him to sign up for military service where they'll send him to the frontlines," he said.

"The humanitarian situation is more and more desperate and it's hard to find food," he added.

No aid has entered east Aleppo for weeks, and international agencies have warned that residents there risk starvation.

The UN voiced provisional support for the humanitarian corridors, but its Syria envoy Staffan de Mistura urged the body be allowed to take charge of the routes.

"Our suggestion to Russia is to actually leave the corridors being established at their initiative to us," he said.

"How can you expect people to want to walk through a corridor, thousands of them, while there is shelling, bombing, fighting?"

'Leave or stave'

On Saturday, regime war planes continued to hit opposition positions, with the Observatory reporting air strikes on two rebel-held areas on the outskirts of Aleppo.

The group also reported clashes in the two neighbourhoods, saying the regime was attempting to forestall any rebel bid to bring in reinforcements to try to break the regime siege.

Syria's opposition has dismissed the humanitarian corridors initiative as a ploy and part of the regimes bid to recapture all of Aleppo city.

"Be clear these 'corridors' are not for getting aid in, but driving people out," Basma Kodmani, a member of the opposition High Negotiations Commission, said on Friday.

"The brutal message to our people is: leave or starve."

Analyst Karim Bitar, from the French think-tank IRIS, also said residents of the east faced "a terrible existential dilemma... between risking starvation or risking to die while fleeing."

More than 280,000 people have been killed in Syria's war which erupted five years ago.

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