Almost 40,000 People Killed In Syria War in 2017, Monitor Says
01 January 2018Sabah Daily
About 39,000 people, including 10,507 civilians, were killed in the war in
Syria in 2017, a monitoring group reported on Thursday.
The dead included 2,109 children and 1,492 women, the Syrian Observatory for
Human Rights said.
The tally included 2,923 regime soldiers and 7,494 terrorists, mainly from
Daesh terrorist group and the al-Qaida group, previously known as al-Nusra
Front.
Around 212 fighters from Lebanon's Hezbollah movement, allied with the Syrian
government, were also killed in the violence, according to the Britain-based
Observatory, which relies on a network of activists inside war-torn Syria.
Syria's crisis began with peaceful anti-government demonstrations in March
2011.
The conflict soon spiraled into a multi-sided civil war that has claimed
hundreds of thousands of lives and displaced about half of Syria's pre-war
population of 22 million.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights did not provide an overall death toll
for the conflict, which is now in its seventh year.
Some opposition activists estimate that more than 400,000 people have been
killed so far in the violence.
Evacuations completed from Syria's Eastern Ghouta
Aid workers completed a series of medical evacuations from a besieged
opposition enclave near Damascus Friday as part of a controversial deal that
saw patients swapped for hostages and prisoners.
The patients were among a list of cases considered critical who were evacuated
since Tuesday night from Eastern Ghouta, an area where the humanitarian crisis
has escalated in recent months.
"Thirteen civilians, including six children and four women, were evacuated"
during the night of Thursday to Friday, a health official in Eastern Ghouta
told AFP on condition of anonymity.
The latest batch of patients the Syrian Red Crescent evacuated brought to 29
the number of civilians who were able to leave the area, which has been
virtually cut off from the outside for four years.
The 29, 17 of them children, were deemed the most pressing cases on a list of
around 500 people the United Nations said last month could die if they did not
receive urgent assistance outside the besieged enclave.
Humanitarian access to the area, which lies just east of the capital Damascus,
has been very difficult and only limited convoys of aid have reached it in
recent months.
A crowd of residents gathered at night around the ambulances to see their
relatives and neighbours one last time.
Red Crescent nurses attended to Marwa, a 26-year-old woman suffering from
meningitis who was being stretchered onboard and given respiratory assistance.
Among the patients who made it out were Fahed al-Kurdi, a 30-year-old man with
cancer, and Zuheir Ghazzawi, a 10-year-old boy who also has cancer and had a
leg amputated.
'Without conditions'
Another 16 patients had been evacuated on Tuesday night and Wednesday night by
the Red Crescent and the International Committee of the Red Cross.
According to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, the patients were
evacuated as part of a deal that saw the opposition who control Eastern Ghouta
release hostages and prisoners.
There were also 29 of them, according to the head of the Britain-based
Observatory, Rami Abdel Rahman.
The deal raised concern that sick civilians were being used as bargaining
chips.
"If they exchange sick children for detainees that means children become
bargaining chips in some tug of war," Jan Egeland, head of the Norwegian
Refugee Council and currently a UN special envoy for humanitarian access in
Syria, told the BBC.
The ICRC issued a statement on Friday urging the parties involved to allow for
more evacuations and better humanitarian access.
"The evacuation was a positive step to end the immense suffering of some
people in Eastern Ghouta, especially children who have limited access to
life-saving medical care," ICRC Syria head of delegation Marianne Gasser said.
"But more needs to be done. The needs of civilians should come first, be it in
Ghouta or elsewhere in Syria, and access to aid should be allowed on a more
regular basis and without conditions," she said.
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