Over 1,000 evacuees from Syria’s Waer reach tent city in Jarablus
|AA Photo


The first group of opposition fighters and civilian evacuees from Homs, reached a tent city in Syria's Jarabulus late Sunday.

A convoy of 32 buses carrying 1,354 evacuees from Waer arrived in the norther city, the last opposition-held district in Homs, after a 12-hour journey.

Sinan Atakan, Provincial Director of Turkey's Prime Ministry Disaster and Emergency Management Authority (AFAD), told Anadolu Agency, it established a city of 230 tents for 306 families on a field in Jarablus.

Atakan said AFAD has also pitched 100 more tents in the region in case other Syrian families arrive. "We have completed all our preparations for the families. There are beds and blankets in the tents," he said.

"Furthermore, our health care stuff are vaccinating the kids. The wounded and ill people have been dispatched to the hospitals."

Among the evacuees were 519 children, 412 women and 423 men.

The evacuation was conducted under a Russian-backed deal between the opposition and the Syrian government to transfer opposition fighters to Idlib or opposition-held districts in Aleppo's northern countryside.

Waer district has been under a siege for years by regime forces of regime leader Bashar al-Assad.

More than 20,000 people have applied to leave the district under the deal, which was concluded March 13.

At least 12,000 residents will be transferred to Aleppo province, 6,200 to Idlib and 2,400 will be relocated in Homs.

Regime and Russian forces will be responsible for the safety of the evacuees from Waer. A Russian military contingent will also be deployed in the district to supervise the implementation of the agreement.

The Turkish Red Crescent and other Turkish groups will be responsible for the care of the evacuees in Aleppo's northern countryside and Idlib.

Syria has been locked in a devastating civil war since early 2011, instigated by the Assad regime which cracked down on pro-democracy protests that had begun as part of the Arab Spring uprisings, with unexpected ferocity and disproportionate force.

Since then, hundreds of thousands of people are believed to have been killed by the conflict and millions more displaced.