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Home News Middle East

Thousands flee bombardment in northwest Syria, head to Turkish border

"The exodus is in the thousands. It's a humanitarian catastrophe, we are seeing people walking in the streets and people waiting near the homes for cars to take them out," says a rescue worker.

by  Reuters and Israel Hayom Staff
Published on  12-22-2019 10:10
Last modified: 12-22-2019 10:24
Thousands flee bombardment in northwest Syria, head to Turkish borderAP

A family with their goods loaded on a truck drives toward the Turkish border in Syria's rebel-controlled Idlib province | Photo: AP

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Thousands of people have fled to the Turkish border from the last big opposition stronghold in northwestern Syria because of an intensified bombardment by Russian forces and the Syrian army, residents and rescue workers said over the weekend.

A long line of vehicles was seen on Friday leaving the opposition-held city of Maarat al-Numan which has sustained the brunt of the attacks, which included airstrikes, they said.

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"The exodus is in the thousands. It's a humanitarian catastrophe, we are seeing people walking in the streets and people waiting near the homes for cars to take them out," said Osama Ibrahim, a rescue worker from Maarat al-Numan.

Airstrikes killed six people early Saturday in Maarat al-Numan and 11 were killed in villages in the area, rescue teams said.

Hundreds of people have been killed this year in attacks on residential areas in the region, according to UN agencies, though a Syrian and Russian military campaign launched at the end of April had subsided in August under a fragile ceasefire.

Syrian state media said the Syrian army had pushed into several villages southeast of Idlib.

Rebel fighters, who say the Russian and Syrian forces are implementing a scorched earth policy as they advance, said villages seized included Um Jalal in southern Idlib province, and Rabea and Harbiya in eastern Idlib.

Russia and the Syrian army, which is loyal to President Bashar Assad, deny allegations of indiscriminate bombing of civilian areas and say they are fighting al-Qaida-inspired Islamist militants.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, who reached an accord last September with Russia to contain the fighting and whose country is seen by many civilians in opposition areas as a protector, has warned of a renewed refugee influx.

Erdoğan said on Thursday that 50,000 people were fleeing Syria's northwestern region of Idlib. He did not say whether any of the people fleeing had entered Turkey.

Tags: Bashar AssadRecep Tayyip ErdoganRussiaSyriaTurkey

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