Civilians flee homes, safe zone shrinks as Syrian regime bombards Idlib
Thousands of Syrians
are fleeing to an ever-shrinking safe zone in Idlib province as the regime
steps up its bombardment of the last opposition-held area in the country’s
northwest.
Since December 1, 2019,
more than 875,000 people have been displaced by the combined air and ground
offensive in Idlib.
The Syrian regime, with
Bashar al-Assad at the head, has gained control of the strategic M5 highway
connecting Damascus and Aleppo and is now stepping up its campaign to capture
the areas of Idlib and Aleppo provinces held by opposition groups, sparking the
latest humanitarian crisis in Syria’s nine-year-long war.
“People are facing a
desperate situation,” said Julien Delozanne, head of the Médecins Sans
Frontières (MSF) mission for Syria. “Attacks are now taking place in areas that
were previously considered to be safe. The people fleeing north are being
squeezed into a territory that is getting smaller and smaller, between the
frontline to the east and the closed Turkish border to the west.”
Civilians on the move
again, hospitals destroyed
The regime, backed by
Russian aircraft, has recently intensified its assualt on the opposition-held
areas in Idlib province and the western areas of Aleppo province. Many of the
Syrian civilians in the area are already in camps, having been transferred
there alongside opposition fighters in deals with the regime as it recaptured
cities elsewhere in Syria through siege and bombardment.
This week, shelling hit
camps around the town of Sarmadah, which hosted refugees fleeing the fighting
in southern Idlib. Takad and other towns have also recently come under fire,
forcing residents to flee into an increasingly small zone of opposition control.
“The only people who
have stayed are the ones who can’t afford a vehicle or don’t know where to go.
We are moving our medical supplies to another location and I am looking for a
safe place to resume our activities in an area where the medical needs are
becoming more and more urgent,” said Dr. Mustafa Ajaj, a local doctor and
director of the health center supported by MSF in Takad.
MSF said that gaining
access to healthcare has become increasingly difficult as the frontline
continues to move and a number of hospitals in the area have been hit and
destroyed. The remaining two hospitals in the western Aleppo countryside have
closed as the cities that in which the hospitals were located in have come
under attack.
Dr. Ajaj had initially
refused to move his family from Takad, but said recent the recent
intensification of airstrikes has made it impossible to live there any longer.
Pushed toward the
Turkish border
The government assault
has pushed many of the region’s inhabitants, many of whom have already been
displaced multiple times, into makeshift refugee camps.
“The whole area is
covered in tents, and the closer you get to the Turkish border, the more tents
there are. Those who can’t afford to buy a tent are sharing tents with other
families,” said a doctor working in the Deir Hassan camp in the north of Idlib
province, 30 kilometers west of Aleppo.
“Some people have
dumped all their belongings on the ground because they haven’t got a tent yet
and they are living in the open. The people living in the open are freezing.
It’s catastrophic,” the doctor added.
Turkey, Russia, and the
crisis
Turkish President Recep
Tayyip Erdogan has warned of a humanitarian catastrophe and promised to not let
Idlib fall. Turkey backs opposition groups against the al-Assad regime and has
observation posts in the region that it recently reinforced with a vehicle
convoy.
With Turkey backing the
opposition and Russia backing the regime, the most recent clashes in Idlib have
strained Russian-Turkish relations across the region. This month, six Turkish
soldiers were killed, prompting a war of words between the two countries.
On Thursday, Erdogan
warned the Syrian regime that it was only a “matter of time” before a Turkish
military operation the area, giving what he said was the “last warning” to the
Syrian regime. Russia described the move as the “worst possible scenario.”
But back on the ground
in northern Syria, civilians are suffering from the cost of the conflict.
“People are lost and
have no idea what is going on. Fear has devastated us. We don’t know what’s
going on politically, and we don’t know what will happen in the future,” said
the doctor from Deir Hassan camp.
“No one knows what the
situation will be tomorrow, only that there are bombings and that government
forces are advancing. All we want is a safe place to live,” the doctor added.