Men, women and children walked along a dirt road to army
lines on the outskirts of Hammouriyeh town, footage on state TV showed.
They carried blankets, bags, and suitcases on their shoulders, some of
them weeping. A group crammed in the back of pickup truck waved Syrian
state flags.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights
said at least 12,500 people left towards government territory. They came
out of Hammouriyeh and Jisreen, which the army advanced into on
Thursday, and other towns nearby, the UK-based monitor said.
A Reuters witness and state-run media separately said thousands were leaving.
“Every hour, over 800 people are leaving,” Russia’s RIA news agency cited Major General Vladimir Zolotukhin as saying.
It
marked the first time such large crowds of people fled the enclave
since the government launched a fierce offensive to recapture it nearly a
month ago.
Last week, pro-government forces splintered rebel territory
into three separate pockets in eastern Ghouta, the largest opposition
stronghold near the capital.
Earlier this week,
smaller groups of sick and wounded people were evacuated from another
zone further north, under a deal the Jaish al-Islam rebel faction that
controls it and Russia.
The
International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said 25 aid trucks
entered that besieged zone and was headed to the town of Douma. “This is
just a little of what these families need,” the ICRC in Syria said in a
tweet.
ICRC spokeswoman Iolanda Jaquemet said the
convoy, which entered through the al-Wafideen crossing with the United
Nations, contained food aid for 26,100 people for one month, among other
items.
“STATE’S EMBRACE”
The Syrian army seized swathes
of farmland and factories in the northeast of Hammouriyeh, said a
military media unit run by Iran-backed Hezbollah, which fights alongside
Damascus.
Wael Olwan, spokesman for the Failaq
al-Rahman rebel faction that controls the southern pocket, accused the
army in a tweet of storming Hammouriyeh and exploiting the plight of
civilians fleeing the bombs.
The Observatory said
government warplanes and shelling had pounded the Failaq zone overnight.
Air strikes on the town of Zamalka there killed 12 people on Thursday,
it said.
The army’s onslaught of air and artillery
strikes have battered eastern Ghouta for almost a month, killing more
than 1,100 people and injuring thousands more, the United Nations has
said.
The trucks had 5,220 ICRC food parcels and
5,220 World Food Programme flour bags, Jaquemet said. A parcel can feed a
family of five for one month.
Damascus and its key ally Moscow say their forces only
target armed militants and seek to end the rule of Islamist insurgents
over civilians and to stop mortar fire on Damascus. They have accused
the factions of preventing residents from leaving, which the fighters
deny.
“Praise God...the families are coming out to
suitable locations to the state’s embrace,” an army officer said on
state television on Thursday.
State TV showed
interviews with people crossing the front, in which they said the Ghouta
insurgents had not let them out before. They were coming through a
crossing in Hammouriyeh, and the Syrian Arab Red Crescent (SARC) would
move them to temporary shelters in rural Damascus, it said.
Dozens
of people crowded into trucks and tractors waved or chanted as they
drove by. The sound of explosions briefly rang out in the background.
One
man cried and thanked the Syrian army in the broadcast. Another from
Hammouriyeh said militants had attacked somebody who tried raising the
Syrian flag there in recent weeks. “They fired at him and brought down
the flag,” the unnamed man said.
The Reuters witness said some arrived at government positions in the nearby town of Beit Sawa on wheelchairs.
A
Hammouriyeh resident, who gave his name as Abu al-Nour, told Reuters
the had been in contact with people in army territory since the
offensive started to get civilians out.
“For eight days, we have coordinated with the soldiers, telling them we want to get the civilians out,” he said.
Reporting
by Lisa Barrington and Ellen Francis and Dahlia Nehme in Beirut, Kinda
Mekieh and Firas Makdesi in Damascus, Stephanie Nebehay in Geneva,
Polina Ivanova in Moscow; Writing by Ellen Francisediting by John
Stonestreet/Tom Perry/William Maclean
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