Sieges increasingly applied as Bashar Assad’s forces, backed by Russian airstrikes, wage new offensive against rebel groups.
BEIRUT, The Washington Post, Jan 23 2016 - Hundreds of thousands of people across Syria in areas besieged by government forces are at risk of starvation and worsening malnutrition, UN officials, aid workers and activists warn.
Syrian forces are cutting off food and medicine to more than a dozen areas, causing civilians to die and complicating renewed peace efforts to end the country’s civil war. Disturbing images on social media purporting to show emaciated men, women and children in the town of Madaya, which has been blockaded by government forces, has in recent weeks added urgency to the issue.
Even before Madaya, sieges were common in the Syrian war, which has led to more than 250,000 deaths, displaced millions and generated a humanitarian catastrophe. But the tactic appears to be increasingly applied as Bashar Assad’s forces, backed by Russian airstrikes, wage a new offensive against rebel groups.
The grim consequences are manifesting in the vitamin-deficient mothers in blockaded areas who increasingly struggle to breastfeed, UN officials and aid workers warn. A growing number of sick, elderly and young, they say, appear to be succumbing to otherwise preventable illnesses.
In some places, such as Madaya, people have starved to death, aid agencies say.
“We’re starving to death, women and children. We have no food,” said Dani Qappani, an activist in Moadamiyeh, an opposition-held town that is also besieged by government forces just a few kilometres southwest of Damascus. In recent weeks, as many as seven people in the community of 44,000 have died because food and medicine have been cut off, said Qappani, a nom de guerre.
The tempo of the war has increased since Russia intervened with airstrikes against rebel forces in Syria late last year. Moscow’s air raids have exacerbated already dire humanitarian conditions in the country, with pro-government forces on the ground in turn tightening sieges on opposition strongholds, analysts and activists say.
Russia, a key ally of Assad, says its intervention is aimed at the Islamic State militant group, but Syrian opposition groups say the air raids have mostly targeted rebel groups.
The sieges appear to be threatening UN-backed peace talks that are supposed to be held in Geneva next week. Last week, several rebel groups announced they would not participate in the negotiations unless the government allows humanitarian aid into areas that its forces are blockading.
Emile Hokayem, a Middle East analyst at the London-based International Institute for Strategic Studies, said Assad’s forces are pressing sieges on rebel-held areas as part of an attempt to seize as much key territory as possible ahead of the Geneva talks. Sieges are part of the government’s long-running strategy to “break and expel populations that are not loyal,” he said.
In general, UN officials and aid workers have increasingly expressed alarm about residents who are cut off from food and medicine by belligerents on both sides of the conflict, an age-old war tactic that is a violation of international law.
According to the United Nations , about 400,000 people are besieged in 15 locations in Syria. The world body defines an area as under siege if it is “surrounded by armed actors with the sustained effect that humanitarian assistance cannot regularly enter and civilians, the sick and wounded, cannot regularly exit the area.”
Opposition activists in Syria accuse the UN of playing down the number of people living under siege, excluding in its figures some areas that are cut off by government forces. Hassan Hassan, a Syria analyst based in Washington, said government sieges tend to be harsher and affect a far larger number of people.
Madaya, a town of more than 20,000 people, has been blockaded by government forces and allied fighters from Lebanon’s Hezbollah militia since the summer, causing more than two dozen people to die from starvation, aid workers say.
Syrian forces are cutting off food and medicine to more than a dozen areas, causing civilians to die and complicating renewed peace efforts to end the country’s civil war. Disturbing images on social media purporting to show emaciated men, women and children in the town of Madaya, which has been blockaded by government forces, has in recent weeks added urgency to the issue.
Even before Madaya, sieges were common in the Syrian war, which has led to more than 250,000 deaths, displaced millions and generated a humanitarian catastrophe. But the tactic appears to be increasingly applied as Bashar Assad’s forces, backed by Russian airstrikes, wage a new offensive against rebel groups.
The grim consequences are manifesting in the vitamin-deficient mothers in blockaded areas who increasingly struggle to breastfeed, UN officials and aid workers warn. A growing number of sick, elderly and young, they say, appear to be succumbing to otherwise preventable illnesses.
In some places, such as Madaya, people have starved to death, aid agencies say.
“We’re starving to death, women and children. We have no food,” said Dani Qappani, an activist in Moadamiyeh, an opposition-held town that is also besieged by government forces just a few kilometres southwest of Damascus. In recent weeks, as many as seven people in the community of 44,000 have died because food and medicine have been cut off, said Qappani, a nom de guerre.
The tempo of the war has increased since Russia intervened with airstrikes against rebel forces in Syria late last year. Moscow’s air raids have exacerbated already dire humanitarian conditions in the country, with pro-government forces on the ground in turn tightening sieges on opposition strongholds, analysts and activists say.
Russia, a key ally of Assad, says its intervention is aimed at the Islamic State militant group, but Syrian opposition groups say the air raids have mostly targeted rebel groups.
The sieges appear to be threatening UN-backed peace talks that are supposed to be held in Geneva next week. Last week, several rebel groups announced they would not participate in the negotiations unless the government allows humanitarian aid into areas that its forces are blockading.
Emile Hokayem, a Middle East analyst at the London-based International Institute for Strategic Studies, said Assad’s forces are pressing sieges on rebel-held areas as part of an attempt to seize as much key territory as possible ahead of the Geneva talks. Sieges are part of the government’s long-running strategy to “break and expel populations that are not loyal,” he said.
In general, UN officials and aid workers have increasingly expressed alarm about residents who are cut off from food and medicine by belligerents on both sides of the conflict, an age-old war tactic that is a violation of international law.
According to the United Nations , about 400,000 people are besieged in 15 locations in Syria. The world body defines an area as under siege if it is “surrounded by armed actors with the sustained effect that humanitarian assistance cannot regularly enter and civilians, the sick and wounded, cannot regularly exit the area.”
Opposition activists in Syria accuse the UN of playing down the number of people living under siege, excluding in its figures some areas that are cut off by government forces. Hassan Hassan, a Syria analyst based in Washington, said government sieges tend to be harsher and affect a far larger number of people.
Madaya, a town of more than 20,000 people, has been blockaded by government forces and allied fighters from Lebanon’s Hezbollah militia since the summer, causing more than two dozen people to die from starvation, aid workers say.
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