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Syria's Eastern Ghouta: two weeks under attack Beirut, March 5 (AFP) Mar 05, 2018 Syria's army unleashed daily air strikes on Eastern Ghouta outside Damascus on February 18 in a bid to root out Islamist rebels and jihadists but killing more than 700 civilians. As the regime was reported to have retaken a third of the enclave Monday, a UN convoy entered in the first aid delivery since the start of the devastating assault two weeks ago. Here is a summary of events:
The strikes continue on February 19 when 127 civilians are killed in the highest death toll over a single day there since 2013, when it was besieged by regime forces. On February 20 Russian air strikes reportedly target Eastern Ghouta for the first time in three months, hitting the key regional Arbin hospital. Six other hospitals are also hit in the bombardments over a 48-hour period, putting three out of service, according to the United Nations.
The Kremlin denies involvement in the air strikes as "groundless accusations". UN chief Antonio Guterres calls for an immediate ceasefire, saying the region's 400,000 residents "live in hell on Earth".
At the United Nations, key regime-backer Russia is pressing for a negotiated withdrawal of rebel fighters and their families, like the one that saw the government retake full control of Aleppo in December 2016. "Yes, Eastern Ghouta will become another Aleppo," says Syria's UN representative Bashar al-Jaafari.
"What those three countries have done to those people is a disgrace," he says. In February 24 the UN Security Council finally gets unanimous backing for a 30-day ceasefire to allow for aid deliveries and medical evacuations. But there are new air strikes the following day and the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitor reports Syrian forces engaged in heavy fighting with rebels, with many dead.
Frustrated, the UN and European Union demand the immediate implementation of the ceasefire. Moscow then announces President Vladimir Putin has ordered a daily five-hour "humanitarian pause" from February 27 and the opening of protected corridors to allow people to leave. Hours after the truce is meant to come into effect, the United Nations says fighting continues, making relief operations impossible. Not one of the battered region's residents board buses provided by the regime to leave. Trucks loaded with aid are blocked.
"The majority (of people) in Eastern Ghouta want to escape the embrace of terrorism. The operation must continue," Assad tells journalists. On March 5, 14 more civilians are reported killed overnight. The UN announces that dozens of trucks of emergency relief have entered the enclave, the first aid delivery since the start of the assault. The aid arrives after the Observatory says that regime troops have retaken a third of the enclave.
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