The Syrian military source, who declined to be
quoted by name, said 62 buses had entered the enclave to bring out the
last civilians and rebel fighters.
The final evacuations of civilians and rebel fighters from east Aleppo appeared to be on hold on Tuesday.
A source close to the Syrian military saying rebels inside the devastated enclave were divided and issuing new demands.
A total of 25,000 people have been evacuated so far from the last city districts held by rebels, Ingy Sedky, a spokesperson for the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), said earlier.
The Syrian military source, who declined to be quoted
by name, said 62 buses had entered the enclave to bring out the last
civilians and rebel fighters.
The rebels, however, had posed new demands for the
release of detainees and were also divided among themselves, adding that
it was not immediately possible to confirm that from rebel sources’’ he
said.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said that there appeared to be about 2,000 to 3,000 people left inside eastern Aleppo.
The monitoring group disputed the ICRC figures, putting the total number of evacuees at 16,200.
A local activist who departed on an overnight convoy said many of those remaining were rebel fighters.
The east Aleppo residents and rebel fighters are
being evacuated under a deal brokered by government ally Russia and
rebel backer Turkey.
Many of those remaining in the area, reduced to an
estimated 2 square kilometers after government forces broke rebel
defenses in November, say they fear for their lives if they are
captured. Nearly 40,000 other residents crossed into government-held areas.
The enclave has been devastated by government
airstrikes and shelling that has killed hundreds, and has been under
siege for most of the last five months.
The
military source had earlier predicted that the Syrian army would secure
the remaining areas of eastern Aleppo after the departure of the last
convoy and then declare the city to be fully under government control.
Despite the hitch, celebrations appeared to be taking
place in the government-held west of Aleppo, where hundreds of people
have also been killed by rebel shelling and mortar fire.
In the city’s Aziziyeh Square, a large Christmas tree
was erected for the first time in four years. A small bomb exploded
before the event, but no injuries resulted, police said.
An official with an aid group helping, receive the
evacuees in rebel-held areas outside Aleppo said that their main concern
was finding shelter, heating and washing facilities given the large
numbers and below-freezing night-time temperatures.
Mohamed Katoub of
the Syrian American Medical Association said that people were hungry
but there were no cases of severe malnutrition, despite eastern Aleppo
having been besieged by government forces for the last five months.

No comments:
Post a Comment