Thousands leave Syria's Douma as evacuations wrapping up

AFP  |  Beirut 

Thousands of Islamist fighters and their relatives left the Syrian town of they once controlled as the last evacuations from Eastern continued today, a monitor said.

The evacuations are part of a deal brokered by Damascus's Russian ally to re-establish regime control on Eastern Ghouta, a area just on the edge of the capital that had escaped government control since 2012.

"After midnight, 85 buses left Eastern carrying 4,000 people, both fighters and civilians," the for Human Rights monitoring organisation said.

"Over the past few days, most of the fighters have left in four successive waves," the Britain-based monitor's head, Rami Abdel Rahman, said.

The group was the last in the erstwhile besieged enclave to resist the exit proposed by but an by the regime on April 7 appeared to break their will.

The government has consistently denied the attack and a delegation of experts from the OPCW arrived in to investigate. They are expected to start their work tomorrow.

"The evacuation operation should wrap up before the OPCW experts enter Douma," said.

According to local medics and a statement by the World Health Organisation, more than 40 people died in the April 7 strike on of symptoms consistent with the use of

rebels have already handed over or destroyed their heavy weapons and announced yesterday that the entire territory that was once the Eastern rebel enclave was now under control.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, April 13 2018. 15:25 IST